Friday, April 3, 2026

Priest Faces Probe Under Iceland’s Conversion Therapy Ban

 

The Roman Catholic cathedral Landakot in Reykjavík, Iceland
photograph by Christian Bickel, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Reykjavik police are evaluating statements made by Catholic priest Fr. Jakob Rolland in an interview with the Icelandic broadcaster RÚV that have been interpreted by critics as an intention to violate the country’s law prohibiting ‘conversion therapy.’

In 2024, the broadly worded law—which bans performing or offering to perform therapy intended to change or suppress sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression—was enshrined after being passed almost unanimously (53-0 with three abstentions and seven absences) by parliament in 2023. The law applies not only to professionals but to all persons. 

Fr. Rolland said that while the church does not offer organized therapy specifically aimed at changing anyone’s sexual orientation, it will not turn away homosexuals seeking guidance in the matter and will offer participation in the daily life of the congregation, worship, and prayer. That lines up with the official position of the Catholic Church—not offering medical treatment but providing spiritual and moral guidance.

“Everyone who comes to church has their problems and sins, struggling to some degree with bad tendencies towards something,” Fr. Rolland said in the interview. 

“Sexual orientation is only one factor among many that concern an individual’s tendencies towards some lifestyle that is not good for the individual and not good for society,” he said, adding that ‘conversion’—a change of heart—“is a key word in the daily life of Catholic people. We are constantly in the position of turning away from what is evil towards what is good.”

More: https://medforth.biz/priest-faces-probe-under-icelands-conversion-therapy-ban/


BXVI: Good Friday Meditation

"Pilate is not utterly evil. He knows that the condemned man is innocent, and he looks for a way to free him. But his heart is divided. And in the end he lets his own position, his own self-interest, prevail over what is right.

Nor are the men who are shouting and demanding the death of Jesus utterly evil. Many of them, on the day of Pentecost, will feel "cut to the heart," when Peter will say to them: "Jesus of Nazareth, a man attested to you by God... you crucified and killed by the hands of those outside the law."

But at that moment they are caught up in the crowd. They are shouting because everyone else is shouting, and they are shouting the same thing that everyone else is shouting. And in this way, justice is trampled underfoot by weakness, cowardice and fear of the diktat of the ruling mindset. The quiet voice of conscience is drowned out by the cries of the crowd.

Evil draws its power from indecision and concern for what other people think."

- Cardinal Ratzinger, Good Friday 2005:

When the Church Stands at Calvary

 

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Good Friday teaches Catholics how to endure corrupt rulers, cowardly shepherds, and apparent defeat without losing hope. 

 
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The Day Everything Seemed Lost

Good Friday is the most realistic day in the Christian year. It does not flatter appearances. It does not pretend that the visible rulers of religion will always be faithful, that civil authority will defend innocence, or that the crowd will love truth when truth stands before it. It shows us the opposite. Priests conspire. A governor caves. The mob howls. Friends scatter. Christ is led out to die.

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That is why Good Friday speaks so sharply to Catholics living through a battered and humiliated age. We look around and see bishops rewarding confusion, punishing fidelity, and treating tradition as the problem while the real vandals are welcomed as pastors. We see a Catholic media class forever promising that the next gesture, the next appointment, the next Roman signal will turn the tide, even as the tide keeps coming in. We see many who once spoke boldly rediscovering caution just when caution serves the wrong men.

Good Friday does not tell us that such things are normal in the sense of being good. It tells us they are possible in the history of the Church because they were present at the center of the Passion itself. The crisis of the Church did not begin when pagans attacked from outside. It reached its most terrible form when the men closest to the sacred used their position against the Lord.

The Religious Class Chose Safety

The horror of Calvary is not only that Christ was killed. It is that He was killed through a collaboration of sacred office, political cowardice, and public pressure.

The chief priests wanted Him gone. Pilate knew better, but feared the consequences of doing right. The crowd preferred Barabbas. Each party could tell itself a story. The priests defended order. Pilate preserved stability. The crowd followed emotion. Together they built the road to the Cross.

There is the permanent warning. Men in office do not cease being dangerous because their office is holy. In fact, when holy office is detached from faith, courage, and love of truth, it becomes more dangerous. It gains the ability to wound souls while still speaking the language of religion.

That is why Catholics should not let themselves be hypnotized by rank, platform, or reputation. A miter does not guarantee fidelity. A collar does not guarantee courage. A blue-check Catholic commentator does not guarantee honesty. On Good Friday, the most respectable men in the room were among the worst men in the room.

Pilate Is Always with Us

Pilate remains one of the most modern figures in Scripture because he represents the man who sees the truth, fears the crowd, and chooses self-protection.

He is not driven by conviction. He is driven by calculation. He does not love justice enough to suffer for it. He wants a solution that preserves his position, quiets the noise, and keeps his hands outwardly clean. He fails because that combination does not exist. A man either defends the innocent or helps condemn Him.

How many churchmen and Catholic public figures now live in Pilate’s shadow? They know the wreckage is real. They know the bad appointments are bad. They know the old faith is being treated as disposable while novelty is treated as vitality. But they also know that saying this too plainly could cost them access, invitations, standing, favor, perhaps even future advancement. So they wash their hands in public phrases and careful omissions.

Good Friday tells us what such prudence is worth.

The Faithful Were Few

Yet Good Friday is not merely a study in betrayal. It is also a revelation of what fidelity looks like when almost everything visible has gone wrong.

Our Lady remains. John remains. The holy women remain. Joseph of Arimathea steps forward. Nicodemus comes with reverence. None of them control events. None of them can stop the execution. None of them look powerful. Yet they are the beautiful part of the scene.

That is a profound consolation for Catholics who feel abandoned, sidelined, or pushed into corners by the official life of the Church. The faithful remnant at Calvary did not win the afternoon. It did something harder. It remained faithful in defeat.

That is often the task assigned to Catholics in times of eclipse. Not to conquer visibly. Not to receive institutional praise. Not to be numerous. Simply to remain with Christ when remaining with Christ costs something.

The Cross Is Still the Measure

Modern churchmanship prefers a religion without too much severity. It wants accompaniment without judgment, mercy without repentance, community without sacrifice, Easter without Good Friday. But the old religion has never permitted that illusion. The world was redeemed by the Blood of the Lamb, not by the management of appearances.

That is why the Cross still judges every false solution now being offered. No marketing campaign can save the Church. No carefully worded ambiguity can restore what has been broken. No sentimental appeal to unity can make corruption harmless. The Church will not be healed by pretending the wounds are shallow.

She will be healed the way she was founded: by truth, sacrifice, suffering, repentance, and fidelity to Christ above every earthly arrangement.

Why Good Friday Gives Hope

At first glance Good Friday seems like the least hopeful day of the year. In reality it is the day that destroys false hope so that true hope can begin.

False hope says the Church must always look successful. True hope says Christ reigns even when His cause appears crushed.

False hope says officeholders will save us if we wait long enough. True hope says Christ remains King even when officeholders fail.

False hope says we should judge by headlines, appointments, and public momentum. True hope says Calvary itself looked like defeat until heaven revealed what had really happened.

That is the lesson for Catholics now. Do not mistake humiliation for abandonment. Do not mistake numbers for truth. Do not mistake official favor for divine approval. On Good Friday, truth was condemned, abandoned, mocked, and nailed up for the world to stare at. Yet Good Friday was not the triumph of evil. It was the beginning of its destruction.

So remain with Christ. Stay near our Mother. Refuse the narcotic of excuses. Let the clever men keep explaining why now is not the time. Let the managers keep managing decline. Let the crowd shout.

They had their hour once before.

Christ still won.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

A question for the tradosphere: getting Confirmation repeated is for cults

 A person I baptized in the traditional rite in 2020 has requested a copy of his baptismal certificate from the church of his baptism "in order to receive the sacrament of Confirmation". They called me wondering why, for the reason that his Confirmation is properly recorded in their baptismal register.

Evidently he now belongs to an imitation Catholic cult which rejects sacraments administered by priests who were ordained by the wrong bishop or in the wrong non-antique rite.

My question: why is he not, in order to be consistent, getting himself re-baptized?

The answer is because he's acting like he's imitation-Catholic cult member, but trying to do so in a canonically irregular ecclesial group that presumes in favor of the sacraments, as Catholics do. That is the reason why they are requiring a copy of his baptismal certificate before administering Confirmation.

Perhaps he'll figure that out ... 

The Pope and the Council of Trent on Holy Thursday



Pope Leo XIV quoting the Council of Trent on Holy Thursday: “Through bishops and priests, constituted as ‘priests of the New Covenant’ according to the Lord’s command (Council of Trent; De Missae Sacrificio, 1), there is made present the sign of his charity towards the whole People of God. Beloved brothers in the priesthood, we are called to serve the People of God with our whole lives.

“Holy Thursday is therefore a day of fervent gratitude and authentic fraternity. May this evening’s Eucharistic adoration, in every parish and community, be a time to contemplate Jesus’ gesture, kneeling as he did, and to ask for the strength to imitate his service with the same love.”

Source: @CatholicSat

Two Priests Die After Saving Altar Server in Ecuador

 N.B. A beach, alas, is not in all respects a playground .



The Church in Ecuador is mourning the tragic loss of two priests who died after rescuing a young altar server from drowning in the sea.


The incident occurred on 13 March at the beach of General Villamil Playas, in the province of Guayas. A group of priests and altar servers had gathered there for a retreat when one of the young boys began to struggle in the water after being caught by strong waves.

Father Alfonso Avilés Pérez, parish priest of San Alberto Magno in Daule, immediately entered the sea to help the boy. Father Pedro Anzoátegui also rushed into the water to assist in the rescue. Thanks to their efforts, the altar server was saved.

However, the powerful current carried both priests away from the shore.

Father Alfonso Avilés died shortly after the incident, while Father Pedro Anzoátegui was initially reported missing. His body was recovered the following day.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Leaked US Bishops Directive for Pastors Attacks Carrie Prejean Boller

 


The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) is opening its pulpits to error with a new directive for pastors naming Carrie Prejean Boller—a recently ousted member of President Trump's Religious Liberty Commission—for her recitation of perennial Church teaching on Jews and Zionism.
The USCCB's Committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs brings her up by name in the directive in what can only seem like an attempt to paint her in a negative light:
Carrie Prejean Boller, a recent convert to Catholicism, sparked widespread controversy when she disputed that blaming Jews for Jesus’ death is antisemitic, defended public figures accused of promoting antisemitic conspiracy theories, declared that Catholics do not embrace Zionism, and repeatedly pressed Jewish witnesses on Israel’s actions in Gaza.
Citing "media personalities" for making misleading statements on Church teaching, the memo provides four arguments for pastors, citing magisterial and non-magisterial sources.
The intent of this piece is to correct any false allegations, obfuscations and outright errors this document makes—for what I can only hope is strictly the sake of ecumenism and not an open door to error.


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