Where you have Islam, you have rape. The Muslim conception of the perfect human being, in the early days of his cult, recruited converts by offering them sex slaves captured in raids on caravans. Those in countries targeted for Islamification who are horrified by Muslim rape gangs will just have to “get over it,” according to a Georgetown University professor.
Friday, May 8, 2026
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Evelyn Waugh, “to die of grief over the liturgical wreckage of the Second Vatican Council…
N.B. Evelyn Waugh died serenely on Easter Sunday after attending with family and a few friends a private TLM offered by a close priest friend that morning.
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Cardinal Sarah’s Warning
Cardinal Robert Sarah's Urgent Warning to Christians Goes Viral
Cardinal Robert Sarah has issued a stark and fearless message that is resonating across the globe:
“Wake up. Islam is a danger. If Christians don’t start caring about our faith, Islam will take over the West. They’ll impose their laws and culture... We will decline.”
Many faithful Catholics believe Cardinal Sarah should have been elected Pope instead of the current leadership's choice of a liberal-leaning figure. His bold defense of traditional Christianity and clear-eyed view of cultural threats stand in sharp contrast to the softer, more accommodationist approach that has dominated in recent years.
Sarah’s warning highlights a growing concern among orthodox believers: without a renewed commitment to Christian identity, doctrine, and courage, the West risks losing its soul to demographic shifts, cultural replacement, and the uncompromising expansion of Islam.
Time to listen, pray, and act. The future of the Church and Western civilization may depend on it.
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Sarah denounces the Church's drift: «It is not an NGO, it has forgotten its mission»

by INFOVATICANA |
In an interview given to the program Le Club Le Figaro Idées, Cardinal Robert Sarah has offered an uncompromising diagnosis of the situation of the Church and the West. The African cardinal warns of a deep crisis of faith in Europe, denounces the reduction of the Church to a social organization, and emphasizes that without God, Western societies are doomed to disappear.
The West, a civilization that has forgotten Christ
Cardinal Sarah expressed his main concern about the spiritual evolution of the West. In his view, the societies that for centuries transmitted the Gospel have stopped considering Jesus Christ as a vital reference.
“We have the impression that the West is no longer interested in Christ,” he stated, warning of a loss of identity that puts at risk not only Europe but also the young Churches. Even so, he recalled that the Church will not disappear: Christ remains with it until the end of time.
“The Church is not an NGO”
One of the central axes of the interview was his criticism of the Church’s drift toward exclusively social issues:
“It gives the impression that for some time now the Church only talks about ecological change, migrants, peace… But the Church is not an NGO! It is not the role of the Church to speak only about social issues. It must put man in relation to God”
For Sarah, when the Church loses its orientation toward God, it stops fulfilling its essential mission.
A “too noisy” liturgy centered on man
The cardinal also denounced the current state of the liturgy, pointing out a loss of the sense of the sacred:
“The Church has damaged the liturgy of the Mass. It is too noisy! It is as if we were celebrating ourselves. It has become a moment of fellowship, when we are there to worship God; we need a liturgy that worships God. We no longer speak of salvation or the soul!”
In his view, the liturgy has stopped leading to God to focus on man.
Vocations: the solution does not involve eliminating celibacy
On the shortage of priests, Sarah clearly rejected proposals to reform celibacy:
“It is not by suppressing the celibacy of priests that the Church will foster more vocations. Look at Anglicanism: it is in full decline, and yet priests can marry. Above all, the priest represents Christ himself. Therefore, priests must imitate Christ in his concrete life, and He did not marry”
Euthanasia: “an inhuman law”
The cardinal was equally forceful when referring to euthanasia laws:
“By authorizing euthanasia, France goes beyond its power; it is an inhuman law. No one can decide who should die or who should live, whether a life is worth it or not, except God. Killing someone is barbaric”
Islam and identity crisis: a call to awaken
On the growth of Islam in the West, the cardinal issued a clear warning:
“Islam can awaken Christians. Muslims pray five times a day; God occupies a fundamental place in their existence. We are only asked to go to Mass on Sunday, but do we do it? If we do not awaken spiritually, with their numbers increasing they will impose their law and their culture”
Saint Pius X Brotherhood: warning about disobedience
The cardinal also addressed the possible ordination of bishops without pontifical mandate:
“The decision to ordain bishops without the agreement of the Holy See and the Holy Father is a grave decision that will tear and break the Church again, that will tear the tunic of Christ; it will make Christ suffer. Souls are not saved in disobedience”
The West without God: a civilization without roots
Overall, the interview draws a clear diagnosis: a civilization that has forgotten God loses its foundation.
Sarah warns that material well-being is not enough to sustain a society and that without its spiritual root, the West runs the risk of emptying itself. At the same time, he insists that only a return to God will allow the Church and society to recover their meaning.
Source: Samantha Smith
https://x.com/samanthataghoy/status/2039846299516784977?s=46&t=IydJ-X8H6c0NM044nYKQ0w
Monday, May 4, 2026
What to make of Cardinal Roche’s comments on the Latin Mass
Niwa Limbu

Cardinal Arthur Roche has defended the Vatican’s restrictions on the preconciliar Latin Mass, insisting that the measures introduced under Pope Francis were prompted by concerns about unity.
In an interview with OSV Newspublished on March 27, Cardinal Roche said the motu proprio Traditionis Custodes was rooted in the way the older form of the Mass had come to be used in certain quarters. “What the Holy Father began to realise is that the concession granted to those who found the new rite difficult was being promoted against the reform of the liturgy from the Second Vatican Council,” he said. “And that promotion … is a promotion ultimately against the unity of the Church.”
The cardinal pointed out that earlier permissions granted during the pontificates of Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI had been conceived as a limited pastoral response. “Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI – before Pope Francis – also gave this concession to celebrate the old form of the Mass for those who could not adjust to the new form of the Mass,” he said, describing these provisions as a temporary accommodation rather than a permanent parallel.
His remarks follow the circulation of a text he prepared for cardinals ahead of the first extraordinary consistory of Pope Leo XIV in January, in which he set out a theological and historical defence of the post-conciliar liturgical reforms and reiterated the principles behind the current restrictions.
Although the document was distributed to members of the College of Cardinals, it was not formally debated at the meeting, but its subsequent publication prompted renewed criticism.
Cardinal Roche framed the question of the liturgy in explicitly ecclesial terms, rejecting the idea that it could be shaped by individual taste or preference. “When we go to church, we don’t go to church to worship simply as an individual but as a family. We go together as the congregation which is called by God,” he said, emphasising that the Church is formed as a people rather than a collection of private devotional choices.
He drew on the earliest history of Christianity to underline the point, referring to the disputes addressed by St Paul in the First Letter to the Corinthians. “What I gave you to celebrate, I received from Jesus himself,” he said, summarising the apostolic teaching that the Eucharist is not a human invention but something handed down and entrusted to the Church. The implication, he suggested, is that fidelity to what has been received must take precedence over attempts to shape the liturgy according to particular sensibilities.
Addressing the intensity of the current debate, the cardinal questioned why controversy had continued despite the fact that the celebration of the older rite remains possible under papal authority. “So I ask myself: Why is all this so intense going on? Why all this noise, the battering of drums and the blowing of trumpets? What else is going on when they have been given the concession of this Mass? What is the problem? Something else is clearly afoot,” he said.
At the same time, Cardinal Roche acknowledged the evident appeal of the Latin Mass for a growing number of Catholics, suggesting that its attraction cannot be understood in isolation from the wider cultural context. “When people go into a church that’s quiet, they find that quite attractive. [The noise is] cut off,” he said, pointing to the contrast with what he described as the constant noise of contemporary life.
He added that “the music and the reverence” associated with the older form of the liturgy also present a challenge to the celebration of the post-conciliar Mass. “That also should be equally attractive every Sunday,” he said, indicating that the qualities which draw people to the traditional rite ought not to be absent from the ordinary form.
Nevertheless, he warned against setting the two forms of the Roman rite in opposition to one another. “Pitching one rite against the other is to lose a sense of the material you are handling. This is not a game. There needs to be give and take on both sides here,” he said, calling for a more measured approach to the question.
The cardinal also addressed concerns about liturgical abuses, arguing that such problems are not confined to the period following the Second Vatican Council but have recurred throughout the Church’s history. “There have always been abuses and always caused by lack of formation or a deep misunderstanding,” he said, again invoking the example of the early Christian communities to illustrate the point.
His comments defending the 2021 motu proprio Traditionis Custodes reveal more about the fragility of liturgy than about any real threat from the preconciliar Latin Mass. By framing the older form of the Roman rite as a “concession” whose prior permissive use undermined ecclesial unity, Cardinal Roche misrepresents the careful pastoral guidance of his predecessors, particularly Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI.
Cardinal Roche argues that earlier permissions for the 1962 Missal were merely a “pastoral accommodation” for those who struggled with the post-conciliar rite and that the celebration of this form “was being promoted against the reform of the liturgy from the Second Vatican Council”, ultimately imperilling Church unity.
Yet Pope John Paul II, in measures such as Quattuor Abhinc Annos and the 1988 Ecclesia Dei decree, explicitly sought to integrate those attached to the older forms into the life of the Church. He did so not to tolerate or abrogate Vatican II reforms, but to maintain communion: “To all those Catholic faithful who feel attached to some previous liturgical and disciplinary forms of the Latin tradition I wish to manifest my will to facilitate their ecclesial communion by means of the necessary measures to guarantee respect for their rightful aspirations.”
Benedict XVI built upon this framework, emphasising continuity and harmony rather than opposition. In his 2007 motu proprio Summorum Pontificum, he affirmed that the 1962 Missal “is to be considered as an extraordinary expression of the same ‘lex orandi’ of the Church” and that it “was never juridically abrogated”.
In his accompanying Letter to Bishops, he reiterated that the older form should be honoured for its venerable and ancient usage and may be celebrated freely by any priest, without imposing conditions on groups’ acceptance of Vatican II reforms. Benedict XVI explicitly rejected the idea that the extraordinary form was a temporary concession or a source of division: “These two expressions of the Church’s lex orandi will in no way lead to a division in the Church’s lex credendi; for they are two usages of the one Roman rite.”
By contrast, Cardinal Roche frames the older rite as a concession now to be restricted for reasons of “unity”, requiring verification of groups’ adherence to post-conciliar reforms. He questions the vigour of debate surrounding the Latin Mass, noting the appeal of its quiet, reverent celebration, while calling for compromise “on both sides”. At the same time, he casts the celebration of the 1962 Missal as something contingent upon papal discretion rather than recognising it as a permanent, venerable form of worship fully integrated into the life of the Church.
Cardinal Roche further invokes St Paul to support his position, paraphrasing 1 Corinthians 11: “‘What I gave you to celebrate, I received from Jesus himself.’” Yet his argument, that fidelity to tradition is primarily about avoiding misuse or personal preference, fails to acknowledge that prior popes understood the 1962 Missal as part of the Church’s inheritance, not a loophole to be revoked. John Paul II and Benedict XVI consistently emphasised that the Mass is entrusted to the Church, not to individual bishops or curial officials, and that pastoral accommodation should serve communion, not control.
Historical precedent underlines this point. The 1570 Missal of St Pius V, later revised by John XXIII in 1962, was never abrogated. In Quo Primum, St Pius V explicitly prohibited alteration, under threat of divine penalty: “We likewise declare and ordain that no one whosoever is permitted to alter this notice of Our permission … Would anyone, however, presume to commit such an act, he should know that he will incur the wrath of Almighty God and of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul.” Benedict XVI cited this continuity in establishing the extraordinary form as a legitimate and enduring part of the Church’s liturgy, to be celebrated in harmony with the post-conciliar rite.
Cardinal Roche’s focus on perceived abuses similarly distorts history. He notes that “there have always been abuses … caused by lack of formation” and suggests that contemporary celebrations of the 1962 Missal are suspect. Yet John Paul II and Benedict XVI responded to similar concerns by expanding access to the older form, trusting in the prudence of faithful priests and communities rather than imposing unilateral restrictions. The pattern is clear: the 1962 Missal has historically been treated as a stabilising instrument of unity, not a divisive concession.
Thus the 1962 Missal is not a provisional or negotiable “concession”, but a fully legitimate, venerable expression of the Roman rite, intended to foster unity in the Church. In defending Traditionis Custodes as a corrective, Cardinal Roche may have intended to preserve unity, yet he inadvertently obscures the very unity previous popes worked so diligently to cultivate.
Source: Catholic Herald
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