Saturday, May 2, 2026

‘The truth is exclusive’: SSPX pilgrimage banned from entering a Catholic church in Italy

 They open to everyone, except those who defend the doctrine,' SSPX priest Don Aldo Rossi stated.

Featured Image
 Shutterstock

(LifeSiteNews) — On March 28, participants of a pilgrimage in honor of Our Lady of Sorrows organized by the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) were banned from entering the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Sorrows in Cuceglio, Italy, outside of Turin.

The SSPX posted a video of Father Aldo Rossi, the leader of the pilgrimage, standing in front of the church door and reading aloud a statement. Even though the pilgrimage had been announced, the doors remained closed to them.

The local newspaper La Voce reported on March 29 that several priests, the Consoling Sisters of the Sacred Heart, as well as dozens of lay people, among them young families, were participating in the pilgrimage that stretched over several miles, with some people carrying a statue of Our Lady of Sorrows. As the newspaper wrote, “the faithful of the Priory of San Carlo in Montalenghe had organized a Lenten pilgrimage, which had been announced in advance.” “No Mass, no liturgical celebration: just a few concluding prayers, as a gesture of devotion” were planned.

La Voce, a secular newspaper, continued its report with consternation since, according to their sources, the decision to close the door to the pilgrimage group was made by the chaplain of the shrine, Don Luca Meinardi, but under the influence of his superior, Diocese of Ivrea Bishop Daniele Salera. The newspaper commented, “A choice that inevitably clashes with an ecclesiastical lexicon that in recent years has emphasized words like welcome, inclusion, dialogue, and mercy.”

Don Rossi, the SSPX priest, comes to a similar conclusion when he stated in his videotaped commentary, and we quote his strong words here at length: “Well, in the prevailing culture of inclusion, doors are opened to everyone: to Anglicans who celebrate Mass in the mother of all churches in Rome, St. John Lateran, even though they are not even priests. Just two days ago, Rome sent a message to the female Anglican archbishop on the occasion of her installation, reminding her to walk together, bearing in mind that differences cannot erase the brotherhood born of our shared baptism. Churches are opening their doors to Protestants, even allowing them to celebrate Mass in a parish here in Turin. We pray together with all religions.”

LifeSite had reported about the fact that Pope Leo XIV had sent on March 26 a welcoming message to Sarah Mullally, the new pro-abortionist and pro-LGBT archbishop of Canterbury, invoking the Holy Ghost for her ministry. “In asking the Lord to strengthen you with the gift of wisdom,” the Roman Pontiff wrote, “I pray that you may be guided by the Holy Spirit in serving your communities, and draw inspiration from the example of Mary, the Mother of God.”

Don Rossi went on to say in his speech in front of the closed doors of the Marian shrine, which was built after a Marian apparition: “Churches are also opening to the earth goddess Pachamama, as happened in Rome. Churches are opening to LGBT groups and celebrating Mass with them, particularly at the Church of the Gesù in Rome. Doors are opening to Buddhists and animists, as happened at the 1986 Assisi meeting, where a statue of Buddha was even placed on the tabernacle. But for the Society of St. Pius X, simply to say a prayer for vocations — not Mass, but prayers for vocations — the doors are closed. In this case, there is no inclusion, but exclusion. Why? Because in the Pantheon there were all the gods except our Lord Jesus Christ.”

Further expounding on this exclusion of the truth of Jesus Christ, Don Rossi pointed out that the founder of the SSPX, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre’s own tombstone has inscribed the words: “I have passed on what I received.” The priest continued, speaking with a calm voice: “Well, we do nothing other than pass on this truth, this tradition that we have simply received. But under the system of inclusivity, this cannot be accepted because, precisely, the truth is exclusive; one cannot remain in the middle.” 

The story about the fate this pilgrimage met has been picked up by Catholic media, such as the traditional Catholic blog Messa in Latina. While pointing out its own critical attitude toward the SSPX, the author of the post, Luigi Casalini, uses some strong words: “The terrible bishop of Ivrea scandalizes the faithful: think instead of his empty churches and seminaries! A real disgrace.”

Jews Hating Christians: “Spitting and humiliation are daily occurrences.”

BREAKING: Ynet, one of Israel’s largest media outlets, has published a bombshell report on Christian persecution in Israel.

Full article translated to English:

"Spitting and humiliation are daily. People are afraid to walk in Jerusalem with Christian symbols."

By Oded Shalom

The smashing of a statue of Jesus in Lebanon by an IDF soldier was a direct continuation of the reality in the Old City and the West Bank. Attacks on priests and monks, the desecration of Christian symbols, and graffiti sprayed on churches take place in broad daylight and are causing echoes around the world. “It has worsened under the current government, and they are not trying to stop it,” says Hagop Djernazian from the Armenian Quarter. Tour guide Paniot Penioto sums it up: “We Christians have been here for 2,000 years. What is your problem?”

Garo Sandrouni says he sees a lot of hatred on the street in front of him, a street with heavy traffic throughout the day of religious Jews on their way to the Western Wall or to yeshivas on Mount Zion and in the Jewish Quarter. Sandrouni observes what is happening from inside a small ceramic shop in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, not far from the seminary for priests that trains young Armenians from around the world to serve as clergy in their communities.

He sits there every day, all day, from around 9:00–10:00 in the morning until 6:00 in the evening, except on Sundays; a shop whose shelves are filled with many hundreds of Armenian ceramic items, characterized by a richness of shapes and colors, all handmade, piece by piece.

And what he sees from his seat behind the small table at the back of the shop is an ugly and offensive reality toward everything he grew up with, against everything that is Christian. “Spitting at Christian clergy, at Christian symbols, spitting toward the Armenian monastery not far from here. Spitting and curses,” he says in a weak and hurt voice.

This reality is so routine here that it has taken over the name of the place. The permanent signs on the walls of the old houses say “Armenian Patriarchate Street,” but some call it “Spitting Street” because of the criminal practice. Where else in the world is there a street called that because people spit on Christian religious symbols?

Ahead of Easter, chains and small flags were hung on the street near the Armenian Orthodox Church, and a religious Jew passed by and tore them down. Djernazian: “What an uproar there would have been if this had been a Jewish symbol.”

We asked Sandrouni how it feels to see this hatred, and he answered with only theee words: “Think for yourselves.” Later, we understood for ourselves, when we heard from community member Hagop Djernazian about an incident that happened about three weeks ago, and is not really unusual here.

Several young people from the Quarter worked on decorating the main street ahead of Easter and hung chains with colorful balls, as well as paper flags of the Armenian Orthodox Church with a cross in the center. “A religious guy with a knitted kippah passed near the Armenian monastery and simply tore one of the flags to pieces,” Djernazian recalls. “We were excited ahead of the holiday, which is very meaningful and important for us, a holiday with many traditions and holiness, and suddenly a person passes by, tears up a church flag bearing a cross right in front of our eyes, and continues on as if nothing happened.

“It is a spit in the face. Real humiliation. I have no words to describe what you feel at that moment. Think what the reaction would have been if something like that happened to a Jewish symbol. What an uproar there would have been. And here, for us, it is almost a daily matter. It crossed every boundary a long time ago. This happened before this government too, but since it came to power, it has become more extreme and more frequent, and we do not see any attempt to stop it. Not even to condemn it or speak out against it. It is so humiliating and intimidating that some people think twice before walking with a visible Christian symbol, such as a pendant, for example, in order to avoid an unpleasant situation. Yes, to that extent.”

The Chief of Staff is Shocked

The video documented last week of an IDF soldier smashing a statue of Jesus in the village of Debel in southern Lebanon was posted by Djernazian on his Facebook page. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quickly condemned the act in English, called the soldier a criminal, and wrote on his X account that “Israel is the only place in the Middle East that respects freedom of worship for all.”


Djernazian answered him in a post of his own. “I wrote that Netanyahu says this is an exceptional incident by a lone individual, and that this is interesting, because at the same time that he claims he protects freedom of worship and Christians in Israel and the Middle East, things like this are happening that prove the exact opposite, including what happens here with us in Jerusalem,” he explains.


The smashing of the statue of Jesus in southern Lebanon sparked angry reactions around the world. The soldier who carried out the act was identified, tried, and sent to 30 days in military detention, together with the soldier who filmed him. After Netanyahu, Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir also condemned it. In a speech before the IDF’s senior command staff this week, he mentioned the incident and asked reproachfully: “Where does smashing the statue of Jesus meet the spirit of the IDF?”

Perhaps this incident does not meet the spirit of the IDF, but it teaches a great deal about the general mood toward Christianity in Israeli society. The phenomenon of smashing symbols connected to Christianity, vandalism at holy places of the Church, spitting and curses directed at priests and monks, happens in broad daylight, before the eyes of passersby in the Old City of Jerusalem, sometimes even in front of police officers. Clergy serving in churches in the Mount Zion area and the Armenian Quarter report that in 2025 there has been an increase in cases of desecration, humiliation, verbal attacks, and spitting at them and at houses of worship.

A 2025 report by the Rossing Center details: 61 attacks on clergy or people with a Christian symbol; 52 incidents of damage to church property; 28 cases of harassment of religious processions; and 14 cases of vandalism of church signs.

The Rossing Center for Education and Dialogue, an institution that promotes an inclusive society for members of all religions, publishes an annual report on attacks against Christians in Israel and East Jerusalem. The data on the incidents are collected together with the Religious Freedom Data Center and show a continuous rise in the number of events. The report, published about three months ago, shows that 2025 was very unpleasant for Christians living here. It recorded 61 physical attacks on clergy or people who had a prominent Christian religious symbol on them. These included spitting, pepper spray, and even beatings.

There were 52 reported and documented cases of damage to church property, including graffiti, trespassing for the purpose of vandalism, and smashing statues. In addition, 14 cases of vandalism of church signs were documented, as well as 28 cases of harassment, including verbal attacks and physical disruption of religious processions. The latest case occurred on Tuesday, when a nun was attacked in the Old City. Truly, freedom of worship.

Voluntary Christian Emigration

In July last year, a field of thorns was set on fire near the remains of St. George’s Church in the Palestinian Christian village of Taybeh, northeast of Ramallah. It is a village surrounded by shepherd farms and illegal outposts, whose residents suffer from harassment by settlers, and suspicion arose that they were responsible for the arson. News of the fire, which almost reached the walls of the ancient site, was published online and alarmed the church leaders based in Jerusalem, who quickly updated the whole world.

European ambassadors came for a solidarity visit to the village. Even the United States ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, an Evangelical Christian and an enthusiastic supporter of the settlement enterprise in Judea and Samaria, came to strengthen the residents of the place.

This is only one example of attacks on Christian houses of worship. About two and a half years ago, when curses and spitting at Christian clergy in Jerusalem increased, the Chief Rabbis published strong condemnations of the phenomenon. But outpost and farm activist Elisha Yered, former aide to MK Limor Son Har-Melech of Otzma Yehudit, did not understand what the fuss was about. On X, he wrote: “A good time to remind people that the custom of spitting near priests or churches is an ancient Jewish custom, and in halacha there is even a special blessing when one sees a church… a blessing that comes to praise the Holy One, blessed be He, who tolerates the evil deeds of idol worshippers.”

In February this year, American media personality Tucker Carlson came to Israel to examine the situation of Christians in Israel and the territories. Carlson is a popular and controversial conservative right-wing figure, who in recent years has promoted, among other things, conspiracy theories, some of them antisemitic. For months he has claimed that Israel and the West Bank have become dangerous places for Christians. The result of his visit is a film about an hour and a half long with the forceful title: “The shocking reality of Israel’s U.S.-funded treatment of Christians in the Holy Land.” As of Monday this week, it had accumulated 1,971,586 views. In it, he speaks with priests and Christian residents who tell the same story of attacks and humiliation.

Carlson also addressed last week’s incident of the smashing of the statue of Jesus by an IDF soldier. He interviewed Alice Kisiya, a Palestinian Christian resident of Beit Jala who fought with other activists for the evacuation of a settler outpost established on private land belonging to Palestinian Christians from the Bethlehem area. “Smashing a statue of Jesus or of the Virgin Mary is not an act of defense against terrorism,” Carlson begins, wondering aloud, “Why would a settler or a soldier break statues like these?”

To hear the answer, we called Kisiya ourselves. “As part of our struggle, we set up a makeshift church on the land,” she answered. “We hung icons of the Holy Mary and crosses in it and prayed there. The settlers told us that they would also take over Bethlehem and expel all the Christians from there. When we told them that Bethlehem is historically connected to Christianity, they answered, ‘It is ours, you will have to leave.’

“In one of their attacks on us, they broke an icon of the Holy Mary. I showed the broken icon in my conversation with Carlson to show that the case in Lebanon is not a one-off or unusual. Apart from him, I gave many interviews to foreign media and emphasized the religious context. It was important for me that the world see what Christians go through here in the land, to tell the world that the settlers and the State of Israel want to cause Christians to emigrate from Palestine so that they can take over our lands. Do not forget that besides the lands Israel holds in the West Bank, the churches and Palestinian Christians are the largest landowners in the territories.”

Evangelicals in Retreat

Hana Bendcowsky, director of educational programs at the Rossing Center, says this is the result of the nationalist radicalization taking place in Israeli politics and society. “The climate is one of Jewish supremacy, of rejecting anyone who is not Jewish, and it is getting worse,” she says.

“There is a feeling that the whole world is against us and that anyone who criticizes Israel is antisemitic. Into this enters the legitimization of harming Christians and humiliating them. We in this country do not understand what this does to affection for and support of Israel among Evangelical communities in the United States. Part of their deep religious worldview for decades was devoted support for Israel, and that is now in retreat, partly because of our treatment of Christians. You see a significant decline in their support for us, especially among young people and among people with an awareness of the value of life and human rights. They see Israel’s conduct and say, ‘These are not values we identify with.’”

And what is Israel doing in this context?

“Other than statements — not much. We at the center, together with activists who collect testimonies and documentation, file complaints with the police, and nothing happens with them. Investigations are barely opened. You see that the police have no interest in dealing with this. So young people who once hesitated over whether to spit at priests say to themselves today, ‘Why not, actually?’ There are the ultra-Orthodox, for whom Christianity is idolatry; most of them ignore it, but there are also those among them who spit and curse. And there are the religious-nationalists, mainly hilltop youth with large kippahs, young people with the attitude of ‘we are the owners here and you have nothing to do in this land.’ They allow themselves to burn, smash, curse, and spit.”

Rabbi Michael Henkin, one of the leaders of “the religious left,” whose members are in contact with Christian clergy in Jerusalem and the West Bank, says that a new ethos has developed in Israeli society, according to which anything perceived as different is a threat. “And every threat is perceived as deserving destruction,” he adds. “This is directed not only at Christian symbols, and is expressed not only in spitting at priests in the Old City, but also against Muslims. After all, we destroyed mosques in Gaza, and in the territories mosques are sometimes burned by hilltop youth. It is also directed against Jews. Look at what the police did to a kippah embroidered with a Palestinian flag alongside an Israeli flag. They cut it.”

Bendcowsky says the big story is the impact on Christian communities: “There are about 197,000 Christians in Israel, including East Jerusalem, and most of them are not spat at and most are not attacked. But their sense of security is shaken when they see graffiti on their church. Even the video of the smashing of the statue of Jesus in Lebanon shakes them and makes them feel unwanted here. Even if it did not happen to them, or in their community, it is an Israeli soldier, and their feeling is that the attack was directed at them as well.

“They feel vulnerable and threatened. I do not know a Christian family in which there is no talk of leaving — at least by the son or daughter. I do not know a family in which at least one child has not already left. It is not only the fear of attack or humiliation. Israel also makes it difficult for Christian communities to hold their religious ceremonies. Look at what happened here during the last Easter.”

Enough, Accept Us

At the end of March, the police prevented the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre to hold the Palm Sunday ceremony there, which opens the events of Catholic Holy Week. The war with Iran was still ongoing, and Home Front Command instructions prohibited gatherings of more than 50 people. This was the reason the festive procession usually held every year did not take place.

Only the Patriarch, the Custos of the Holy Land on behalf of the Vatican, Father Francesco Ielpo, and two companions arrived at the church. According to the Church, the arrival had been coordinated in advance with the police. Nevertheless, the police prevented the Patriarch from entering, and for the first time in 100 years the religious ceremony was not held inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The entire Catholic world rose to its feet. The Prime Minister of Italy, the President of France — everyone issued condemnations, and Netanyahu was once again forced to apologize.

Ten days passed, and it was the Orthodox Church’s turn to mark the beginning of Easter with Holy Saturday. What happened at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is described to us by tour guide Paniot Penioto, a Christian of Greek origin who was born, raised, and still lives in the Christian Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City:

“Holy Saturday is a very sacred holiday for us. It is a day that symbolizes the miracle of Jesus’ resurrection, when he rose from his tomb and returned to life. Without the Messiah rising from death, we have no religion. That is what makes him our God, and that is why this day is so sacred to us.

"I am very well known in the Christian community in the Quarter, especially among the Greek Orthodox community. For 25 years, I have been the one coordinating the procession with the police, the church, the youth, and the scouts, and every year the situation deteriorates. With every passing year, we feel that we are less and less allowed to mark the holiday properly according to our traditions and rituals. These are rituals and traditions of a thousand years and more."

For the rest see Kegham Balian @kbalian90 on Twitter at: https://x.com/kbalian90/status/2050535919875178866?s=20

Israelis destroying Catholic buildings in Lebanon


Israel demolished a monastery and a nuns' school in the Lebanese village of Yaroun. Soldiers were filmed manually laying explosives inside religious buildings.

At least 9 religious sites gone across the border villages. Churches. Mosques. Roman-era shrines on UNESCO's protected list.

Israel's own defense minister called it the "Rafah model."

Nobody's hiding what this is. The question is why almost nobody's covering it.

Source: Lebanon's National News Agency, The New Arab

Also:

2 IDF soldiers have been jailed for 30 days after one smashed a statue of Jesus Christ with a sledgehammer in southern Lebanon while the other filmed it. 

Both removed from combat duty.

Swift punishment, but this is not an isolated incident. It follows the destruction of a Saint George statue in Yaroun during Palm Sunday, the demolition of a 1st century Christian shrine near Tyre, and IDF strikes on two churches in Gaza.

A pattern that raises serious questions about the IDF's attitude toward Christian symbols.

Source: BBC News

All posted by @MarioNawfal, Twitter


Friday, May 1, 2026

BREAKING: Federal Appeals Court Temporarily Halts Abortion Pills by Mail

 The court order, in a lawsuit by the state of Louisiana, pauses a Food and Drug Administration regulation that greatly expanded access to the abortion pill mifepristone.

Listen · 1:40 min

Cardinal Roche’s Unity Means Submission

 N.B. Who the hell does he think he is? Force me to choose between you, a mere cog in the machine, and the Tradition and I’ll choose the Tradition every time.

Arthur Roche has spent years doing the sort of damage that only a curial functionary can do well: dressing coercion in the language of pastoral concern, dressing rupture in the language of continuity, and then acting scandalized when Catholics notice the costume slipping. In his new OSV interview, he says liturgical debates should be viewed through the lens of unity, not personal preference; he repeats that the older rite was being used against the reform of Vatican II; he calls the traditional Mass a concession still available only “by papal authority”; and then, with a mix of hauteur and paranoia, asks why there is “all this noise” and says “something else is clearly afoot.” He even admits that silence, music, and reverence are part of the old rite’s attraction, and that this exposes a challenge to the Novus Ordo.

That last admission is key. Instead of battling some imaginary cult of nostalgia, Roche is staring straight at the obvious. People are drawn to a liturgy that feels sacred, sounds sacred, and behaves as though God is present. He knows it. He says it. Then he turns around and treats the people who want such worship as a political problem to be managed. The insult comes wrapped in a smirk. They come because the church is quiet, the music is serious, and the rite is reverent. But his answer is not repentance for the desert that replaced it, but another lecture on unity.

The truly revealing thing about Roche is not merely that he wants restrictions. Plenty of prelates want them. The revealing thing is that he already gave away the game in 2023, when his BBC remarks were widely reported as saying that “the theology of the Church has changed.” He explained the difference in terms that effectively conceded what defenders of the post-conciliar settlement had denied for decades: the old Mass and the new order of worship do not simply differ in language, calendar, or emphasis, but in the theological understanding conveyed by the rite itself.

That is why Roche deserves special contempt. For years, traditional Catholics were told that their objections were hysterical, that the new rite was merely the old faith in updated ceremonial dress, that continuity was obvious to any honest observer. Then Roche, perhaps too dull to understand the implications of his own candor, blurted out the truth. Yes, there was a change, the reform embodied it, and the inherited Roman rite sits there like stubborn evidence against the official fairy tale. And once he admitted that, the whole anti-traditional campaign took on a different light. It ceased to look like housecleaning and started looking exactly like what it is: an attempt to suppress a liturgical witness that remembers too much.

More: https://open.substack.com/pub/bigmodernism/p/cardinal-roches-unity-means-submission?r=2x82t4&utm_medium=ios

BREAKING: Cardinal McElroy announces new auxiliary bishops for the Archdiocese of Washington, transfer of local bishop to Wheeling, WV


                        Most Rev. Gary Studniewski 


                      Most Reverend Robert Boxie

The following letter was transmitted electronically early this morning:

May 1, 2026 

I am delighted to share with you the news that today Pope Leo has appointed Father Gary Studniewski and Father Robert Boxie to be Auxiliary Bishops of the Archdiocese of Washington. Both are exemplary leaders in our local church, and they will provide great wisdom, counsel and collaboration to me and selfless priestly service to the entire People of God in the District and the five Maryland counties. 

 Bishop-Elect Studniewski brings an immensely rich and varied life of accomplishment and service to his new role in the Church. A native of Toledo, Ohio, the Bishop-Elect was ordained for the Archdiocese in 1995 and has served as a parochial vicar; a distinguished chaplain in the United States Army rising to the rank of Colonel; and pastor of both Saint Peter's Parish on Capitol Hill and the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament. As a dean, member of the presbyteral council and mentor to our newly ordained, he has shown the Christ-like love and priestliness that are emblematic of our presbyterate. In each of these roles, he has demonstrated profound faith, collaborative leadership, pastoral sensitivity, initiative and zeal, making him an ideal candidate for the episcopacy.

Bishop-Elect Boxie was born and raised in Lake Charles, Louisiana. After graduating from Vanderbilt and Harvard Law School, he came to Washington to clerk for a federal judge and then work in a law firm, and during those years felt an ever-deepening confirmation of the call to the priesthood that had come to him earlier in life. He was ordained for the Archdiocese in 2016 and received his first assignment as parochial vicar at Saint Joseph in Largo under the tutelage of Bishop Roy Campbell, who was a wonderful mentor to him. Presently, Bishop-Elect Boxie is the Catholic chaplain for Howard University, where he has deeply enhanced the ministry and community there, while building a chapel and dramatically renewing the Sister Thea Bowman Catholic Student Center. He has a priestly heart and keen intelligence, as well as the prayerful compassion and evangelizing core that will be a great gift to our local church in deepening our outreach to all and helping particularly to enrich our black communities.

Today the Holy Father has also announced the appointment of Bishop Evelio Menjivar-Ayala to be the new bishop of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia. All of you understand how great a loss this is for the Archdiocese. Bishop Menjivar's pastoral love and zeal, as well as his passion for justice and sensitive care for the Hispanic and immigrant communities of our Archdiocese have planted seeds of grace that will yield a harvest here for decades to come. Our consolation is that the people of West Virginia will have a splendid new bishop to continue the work that Bishop Brennan has undertaken there, and for that we give thanks.

Finally, Pope Leo also announced today that he has accepted the resignation of Bishop Roy Campbell as auxiliary bishop of Washington. To Bishop Campbell, who has so magnificently served as pastor and shepherd within our local church, our only words must be thanks. It was a great gift to the Archdiocese that God called Bishop Campbell from his life as a successful banking executive to enter the pathway to the priesthood and ultimately the episcopate. His wisdom, prudence, and love for Our Lord and Our Lady, combined with a keen mind for administration and a caring heart for the poor and the marginalized to provide for us a magnificent leader for the life of our Archdiocese. And his particular care for the black communities of our Archdiocese is an immense grace to our local church. Bishop Campbell will continue as pastor of Saint Joseph until July. It is a fitting tribute to him that Bishop-Elect Boxie, whom Bishop Campbell formed in his f irst assignment, now has been appointed a bishop on the same day that Bishop Campbell retires as auxiliary bishop.

I give thanks to Pope Leo for his great care for the people of the Archdiocese of Washington, and for providing to our local church and to the people of West Virginia such splendid episcopal leadership. And I thank Cardinal Christophe Pierre, who has done so much to make these appointments possible during his service as our Papal Nuncio. Most importantly, I give thanks for all of you in your priestly sacrifices and generous faith.

Sincerely yours in Christ,

Robert Cardinal McElroy Archbishop of Washington.



“Catholic Maxxing”, online click-bait mania and getting Sacraments repeated “conditionally”


I must confess that I was somewhat puzzled recently over the near-homicidal rage resulting from a certain frustrated effort to get a traditional, as in 1962 rite, (read lock-tight guaranteed validity and liceity, etc.) sacrament re-conferred conditionally.

Imagine if you will the sheer weirdness necessary for someone who claims Catholic faith to react angrily to the news they received a valid sacrament (which just so happens to be the sort that cannot be repeated. Such as Confirmation, for example.)  Now it all makes sense …

This from James the Catholic @thetexastrad:

“ @RealCandaceO continues Catholic Maxxing as she reveals she recently got confirmed in the faith, in the Traditional Rite, by a cardinal, on a recent trip to Rome.

May God continue to bless and keep her.”

James the Catholic names it: “Catholic Maxxing.” Read it again: “by a Cardinal”. Why go to Rome to get a sacrament readily available in almost any parish here at home? It’s just ever so slightly better than receiving the sacrament from, say, a mere priest with delegation in a plain old US parish.  And so much better for “Internet beauty contest” purposes. Much more click-worthy. Admiring glances can be counted ever so much more efficiently on the Internet.

Candace got clicks, no doubt. Everybody wants to see the pics of her and the Cardinal who confirmed her. Or at least the pose in a beautiful Roman church with her photogenic family. Big news! We’re living large on the internet, now. Distraction from the hum-drum details of daily life in abundance. Etc.

There are any number of internet-induced mental illnesses and moral sicknesses. “Looks Maxxing” is the current rage, where any medical, pharmacological or surgical, intervention is sought to “improve” appearance. No thought of consequences in 50 years. If one lives that long, such that all the surgeries begin to fall apart and the drugs wreak havoc on the system. But the mania is driven by the extreme superficiality available on the Internet: appearance is everything.

Porn is another aspect of online activity that presents a constant moral danger to anyone viewing a screen or phone.

Addiction looms.

Catholics who can run with the photogenic crowd, for a while at least, in their youth, can get free online entertainment. They can collect likes, followers and “friends”. They can compete for the “trad chad” title and tout their “clout”.

But images are needed. Feeding the voracious appetite for photos, pics, and getting clicks sends the potential chad trad on a constant hunt for new thrills and chills.

Well, going to a trad group known for generously offering conditional Confirmations can get you a photo op afterward with a REAL trad Archbishop, consecrated in the REAL old rite. Wow! And the vestments will provide the super “drip” that all the kids like! Such is sure to look swell on my Insta and social media. I will win the admiration of all my friends and countless strangers, too!

Catholic to the max. Catholic Maxxing victory. Marinating in self satisfaction results. But only for a while ….

Many young sub-25 individuals without fully formed brains are madly putting everything on the internet. As are many whose brains are only recently fully formed.  

Sure, the first thing sketchy bad actors do is block anyone who might track and identify their psychopathic and anti-social behavior. Comfort is measured by cushioning oneself from the nasty consequences of personal misbehavior as long as possible. While, no doubt, assuring oneself the personal content can be otherwise conceal from certain unwanted prying eyes as occasion warrants. Good luck with that. In any conflict with AI and big internet the odds are always stacked against the lonely individual without a millionaire lawyer.

Now, on to the next online competition for most views, likes and retweets. Catholic to the max! Well, at least superficially. They won’t really find out about the IRL, will they?



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