Sunday, April 19, 2026

Belgian national broadcaster apologized for airing show glorifying violent Christian icinclasm

BREAKING 🇧🇪 

The anti Christian Belgian radio hosts who SMASHED statues of Jesus and Our Lady have had a belated and half hearted apology issued on their behalf: 

'Eva and Dries apologize. The video was intended as a humorous act, and they underestimated how sensitive religious symbols can be. They understand that this was hurtful to some people and would make different choices today.

VRT considers it important that all its employees show respect for every religion. Our aim is not to compare religions, but to treat everyone's beliefs with care'

The Good Shepherd Does Not Flee

Good Shepherd Sunday for Catholics Living Among Wolves, Hirelings, and the Ruins of the Postconciliar Church

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Review: “The Hail Mary Project”


Like @BishopBarron points out, Project Hail Mary is drenched in Christian imagery.

A man named Grace inhabits the Hail Mary.

"Hail Mary, full of Grace..."

That's not an accident.

Wonderful film.

@GiancarloSopo

I just saw the much talked about film “Project Hail Mary.” It's very entertaining and uplifting and features a fine performance from Ryan Gosling. But what most intrigued me were the powerful Christian themes at play in it. The title, of course, refers to the Hail Mary pass in football, since the adventure undertaken is a fairly desperate attempt to save the planet. But it also becomes eminently clear that the reference is not just to football but to the Blessed Mother herself, for the Gosling character is undoubtedly a Christ-figure. I don't want to give away too much of the plot, but it involves a willingness to sacrifice one's life utterly in order to deliver the entire human race from disaster. It is, of course, no accident that Gosling's character is called Ryland Grace, for throughout the movie, his presence and actions constitute undeserved favor to others. A particularly intriguing character in the film is a sober German scientist who relentlessly presses Grace to make the supreme sacrifice, even when he is unwilling. She represented for me the great moral demand that presses upon us throughout our lives, continually summoning us to self-gift. A last observation: Jesus had a second in command whom he called Peter (the Rock); Ryland Grace has a very unusual sidekick whom he calls “Rocky.” I'll leave it at that.

I know lots of people say that Christianity is in irreversible decline and that we are inhabiting, at least in the West, a post-Christian society. I'm not so sure. Like it or not, we remain a Christ-haunted culture—and a film like “Project Hail Mary” makes this clear.

@BishopBarron

Pope Speeches Not About Trump

N.B. Pope makes point that his speeches prepared well before Trump eruption, but delivered after, are not about Trump. Lambastes “commentary on commentary”.

The Pope in flight: "A certain narrative has spread, not entirely accurate, due to the political situation that arose when, on the first day of the trip, the President of the United States made some statements about me. Much of what has been written since then is nothing more than commentary on commentary, in an attempt to interpret what was said.” An example is the speech delivered at the Prayer Meeting for Peace, on April 16. A speech that “had been prepared two weeks earlier, well before the president commented on me and on the message of peace that I am promoting. Yet, it was interpreted as if I were trying to debate with the president again, which is not at all in my interest. I come to Africa primarily as a pastor, as head of the Catholic Church, to be with, to celebrate with, to encourage and accompany all African Catholics.”

Vatican News Source via @matteomatzuzzi on Twitter/X

Leo Denies Loaves and Fishes Miracle For the Second Time; Catholic Media Silent

 N.B. If generosity is a miracle, go be a Muslim …

As Leo repeats his modernist reading of John 6, Rome probes Benedict’s resignation, pro-lifers demand repentance, and new questions swirl around the January consistory.

The Miracle Leo Keeps Explaining Away We already saw this pattern in my June 23, 2025 piece, Bread Without Doctrine: Leo XIV’s Corpus Christi and the Vanishing Reality of the Eucharist, where I reported that Leo had been turning Eucharistic theology into a language of solidarity, distribution, and communal sharing rather than sacrifice and supernatural reality. What happened in Douala on April 17, 2026 was a second offense, cleaner and blunter than the first. In his homily at Japoma Stadium, Leo said that “the multiplication of the loaves and the fish happened while sharing: that is the miracle.” That sentence does not merely stress charity flowing from the miracle. It relocates the miracle itself. The wonder is no longer Christ’s sovereign act over nature. The wonder becomes the crowd’s social behavior. Bread appears, in effect, because people finally learn to stop clutching and start sharing. Christ becomes less the divine Lord who multiplies and more the moral facilitator who teaches redistribution. This was not a one-off improvisation. On June 30, 2025, in his message to the FAO, Leo had already said that “the real miracle” in the multiplication narratives was to show that hunger is overcome by sharing rather than hoarding. So now the line has been spoken twice, once in an international social setting and once in a liturgical homily on John 6. At that point defenders can stop pretending this is a clumsy phrase. It is a theological habit. Why This Is Not a Catholic Reading of John 6 The problem is not that Christians should share bread. Of course they should. The problem is that John 6 is not narrated as a lesson in crowd ethics. It is narrated as a miracle of Christ. The text says the people received “as much as they wanted,” and the fragments filled twelve baskets afterward. The Church’s catechetical tradition has treated the multiplication of the loaves as a true miracle and as a prefiguration of the Eucharist’s superabundance. The Catechism does not say the crowd’s generosity is the miracle. It says the miracles of the multiplication of the loaves prefigure the Eucharist. The miracle is the sign. The sign points beyond itself. Leo’s reading inverts the whole order of the passage. In Scripture, Christ acts first and charity follows. Grace descends and abundance results. The disciples distribute because the Lord has already made provision. Leo reverses the sequence. Sharing becomes the cause and abundance the result. That is ideological ventriloquism. It reads a modern social ethic back into a text whose force lies precisely in the divine intervention of Christ. Even Leo’s own conciliar Compendium of the Catechism says Jesus performed signs and miracles “to bear witness” that the Kingdom is present in him. Vatican I likewise taught that divine revelation is made credible by “external signs,” and Pascendi restated that condemnation against those who would reduce faith to internal experience and subjective religious sentiment. Once the miracle is no longer an external sign wrought by Christ, but a symbol generated by human sharing, the whole Catholic structure of miracle begins to collapse. Why the Error Is Modernist This is exactly where modernism lives. Modernism does not always stride into the sanctuary waving a banner that says, “I deny the supernatural.” It often works more elegantly. It keeps the biblical scene, keeps the religious language, keeps the pastoral application, and quietly evacuates the miracle. The event remains in the text, but its supernatural content is drained away and replaced with a humane message palatable to modern ears. St. Pius X described the modernist method with unnerving precision. The divine fact is pushed out of history and into the realm of faith language, symbolism, sentiment, and interior meaning. The critic, he says, strips away whatever surpasses man in his natural condition. That is exactly what Leo’s formulation does to John 6. The miraculous multiplication is no longer the stubborn fact that forces you to reckon with Christ’s divinity. It becomes a pious emblem of fraternity. The bread still circulates. The divine vanishes. And notice how perfectly this fits the postconciliar instinct. The old Catholic instinct looked at the miracle and said: behold the Lord who commands creation, the same Lord who gives His flesh as food and whose sacrifice alone saves. The new instinct looks at the miracle and says: behold the community organizing itself around a moral insight. One approach ends at adoration. The other ends at an NGO. The Eucharistic Damage The damage does not stop at biblical interpretation. John 6 is not just any chapter. It is one of the Church’s great Eucharistic texts. The Catechism explicitly links the multiplication miracle to the Eucharist’s superabundance and then moves directly into Christ’s Bread of Life discourse and the institution of the Eucharist as the memorial of His death and Resurrection. When Leo reduces the sign to social sharing, he weakens the very bridge the Church has always used to lead souls from the miracle of the loaves to the mystery of the altar. This is a doctrinal deformation. Once John 6 is domesticated into a sermon about equitable distribution, the Eucharist itself slides toward symbolism. The altar becomes a table of inclusion. The sacrificial character recedes. The supernatural abundance of grace is translated into human fellowship. My June 2025 article saw that trajectory already. Douala confirms it. The same Leo who once wrapped Corpus Christi in the language of sharing has now taken the biblical miracle itself and done the same surgery to it

As seen on Twitter

 


Oh, the irony …

Friday, April 17, 2026

History’s Pro Tips on Iran

 

FRANCIS X. MAIER

Are the military actions the U.S. and Israel have taken against Iran just? Fran Maier lays out his case for the affirmative, first by going over all the ways that the Iranian government is not a good faith actor. He writes, “A reasonable peace assuring mutual security has never been, and is not even now, on Tehran’s agenda.”

For further reading: Just war theory is more difficult to apply in this age of drone strikes an proxy wars, but that does not make it irrelevant. During the tensions with Iran last summer, Richard Cassleman argued that just war still applies today (“Is Just War Theory Still Relevant?” 2025).


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