Saturday, April 25, 2026

The Wrong Problem

 N.B. Tierney gets it. Someone is finally listening.


Friday, April 24, 2026

Death knell for Traditionis custodes: “ Cardinal Eijk Celebrates First Traditional High Mass, Calls It ‘Unforgettable’l

 


In new interview, the Primate of the Netherlands explains his decision to learn the TLM and says he looks forward to celebrating it again.


ROME, 25 March 2026 — Dutch Cardinal Willem Eijk has described celebrating his first Pontifical High Mass in the traditional Roman rite as an “impressive and unforgettable experience.”

In an interview published today on the Italian blog Messa in Latino, the 72-year-old Metropolitan Archbishop of Utrecht and Primate of the Netherlands explained why he decided to learn the vetus ordo, said he has received considerable positive feedback after doing so, and noted that his first Pontifical High Mass brought together both regular attendees of the Traditional Latin Mass, including large numbers of young people and families, as well as Catholics more accustomed to the Novus Ordo.


More: https://x.com/paulinusoftrier/status/2036792131080114644?s=46&t=IydJ-X8H6c0NM044nYKQ0w

Save Holy Family Church, Detroit

 Historically Italian. Slated for closure.



More photos: https://historicdetroit.org/galleries/holy-family-roman-catholic-church-photos

Parish web site: https://www.hfdet.org/

Thursday, April 23, 2026

BREAKING: Leo returns fire: response to Cardinal Marx directive for priests to bless sin

N.B. Now just watch Martin spin this so hard he makes himself dizzy … But the pressing question remains: why a special document that picks out certain people based on their sexual aberration among the many who are blessed at every Mass?

JUST IN: Pope Leo XIV responds to Cardinal Marx —

Says Vatican does not approve blessing of same sex couples.

Adds a blessing can be given to “all people” like at the end of Mass.

Leo states—— 

“First of all, I believe it is very important to understand that the unity or division of the Church should not revolve around sexual issues. We tend to think that when the Church speaks of morality, the only moral issue is a sexual one. In reality, I believe there are much larger and more important issues—such as justice, equality, the freedom of men and women, and religious freedom—that should take priority over that particular issue. 

“The Holy See has already spoken with the German bishops. 

“The Holy See has made it clear that we do not agree with the formal blessing of couples—in this case, same-sex couples, as you requested—or of couples in irregular situations, beyond what Pope Francis has specifically permitted by saying that all people should receive the blessing. 

“When a priest gives the blessing at the end of Mass, when the Pope gives the blessing at the end of a great celebration like the one we had today, there are blessings for all people. 

“Francis’s famous expression, ‘everyone, everyone, everyone,’ expresses the Church’s conviction that everyone is welcomed, everyone is invited, everyone is invited to follow Jesus, and everyone is invited to seek conversion in their own lives. 

“To go beyond this today, I believe, could cause more disunity than unity, and that we should seek to build our unity on Jesus Christ and on what Jesus Christ teaches. This is my answer to the question.”

@MLJHaynes on Twitter/X.

SSPX distances itself from sedevacantist movements


The @SSPXEN have distanced themselves from sedevacantist positions, with the official news outlet publishing a talk against the stance. 

@FSSPXFR -- “In light of the doctrinal deviations observed since the Second Vatican Council among a large portion of the ecclesiastical hierarchy, certain so-called “sedevacantist” movements — unaffiliated with the FSSPX — recklessly assert that the Church could survive without a pope and that those who hold the highest offices do not truly possess the authority they claim.”

Via @MLJHaynes

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Story of Eva Lavaliere

 

She was one of the most beautiful and admired women in France. Her name was Eva Lavariere. Addicted to alcohol and tobacco, she was the lover of several men, including a marquis and a baron. Her life of sin made her utterly miserable. One night, after achieving one of her greatest triumphs in the theater before thousands of spectators, she felt so unhappy for lacking peace in her heart that she threw herself into the river to take her own life.  

Fortunately, someone saved her life, and when she confessed to a priest, Christ Jesus restored peace to her soul. The happiness she had not found amid applause and sins, she discovered in a confessional upon feeling forgiven by the Lord. After a life of emptiness, she became Catholic in 1918 and joined the Secular Franciscan Order, taking the name Eva of Jesus.

She died in the odor of sanctity in 1929.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Was Leo XIV Chosen by Francis...or Not?

 


Examining the evidence behind the “chosen successor” narrative

Ever since Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost was elected Pope Leo XIV of the Catholic Church, there have been attempts to portray him as Francis’s intended successor, as his protegé and closest collaborator. Such notions have been pushed by Christopher Hale and modernist commentators such as Austen Ivereigh, and recently Gerard O'Connell and his wife Elisabetta Piqué. Two things that these various narratives have in common are that they were constructed entirely after the fact and that they tend to show a blatant ignorance of curial politics.

Before Prevost was elected, few if any sources portrayed him as particularly close to Francis, nor was he said to be his intended successor. While Francis was ailing in the hospital, Zuppi was again rumored to be his desired heir; and Aveline as well, but not Prevost.

Yet, now it is suddenly claimed that Francis prepared Prevost to be his successor. Key to this narrative is the claim that Francis showed special favour to Prevost by making him bishop and later prefect and cardinal, as well as allegedly showing him membership in other dicasteries.

That Francis made Prevost a bishop is not indicative of personal favor at all.

- Prevost had not just been a two-time prior general of the Augustinian order, but also was a trained canon lawyer, ecclesial judge, missionary, mission director, rector of a seminary and seminary teacher. Being made a bishop was a completely logical next step which was to be expected.

- Chiclayo is a regular diocese, not an archdiocese. It’s not an exceptional position by any standard. Prevost also wasn’t moved from Chiclayo to a bigger archdiocese after a few years, as some of Francis’s favorites were. From 2014 till 2019 he served there as a bishop completely uneventfully, without any favors whatsoever.

- He was not invited to synods, given any curial functions or any meaningful honours. Had Francis died after about five years as Pope, something he suggested could happen early in his papacy, then Prevost would simply have been some local bishop he appointed in Peru.

- Prevost largely remained an unknown till 2023. For ten years of Francis’s papacy, he was largely invisible. Francis did make Prevost a member of the Dicastery for Bishops in 2019 and then of the Dicastery for the Clergy in 2020, but that rightfully got little attention. Francis appointed other smaller bishops to such dicastery memberships, without especially favouring them as well, including Bishop Gregory Bennet of the Diocese of Sale in Australia for the Dicastery for the Clergy and Bishop José Antonio Satué Huerto of the Diocese Teruel and Albarracín in Spain.

- Prevost's two memberships didn’t lead to anything else for years. Inside-sources are virtually unanimous on the fact that Prevost was not Francis’s first choice as prefect for the then Congregation for …

More: Pelican paywall

https://x.com/pelicanbriefhq/status/2036524697706250562?s=46&t=IydJ-X8H6c0NM044nYKQ0w



Thank you for visiting.

Followers

Kamsahamnida, Dziekuje, Terima kasih, Doh je, Grazie, Tesekur, Gracias, Dank u, Shukran

free counters