World

Ireland's Catholic Underground

2022 marks the centenary of the Legion of Mary, the Irish church’s greatest success in the Twentieth Century.

From confronting Communism in China and North Korea to confronting poverty in South America and Africa to confronting atheism in the West, Frank Duff’s visionary apostolate has amassed tens of millions of followers.

As part of the celebrations for their centenary, the Legion are running a series of Men’s Conferences throughout the year. The Morning Star Hostel, which provides accommodation, food and spiritual support for men in need, has hosted the first two events.

The second one involved Father Brendan Kilcoyne, of the Brendan Option podcast, hosted by Immaculata Productions who filmed the event for Youtube.

In a wide ranging keynote speech, Father Kilcoyne spoke about the upcoming Synod and the dangers of being too tame in conversations surrounding it. He also spoke about the need for Catholics to be unafraid of what they have to offer the world, a world which as Father Kilcoyne puts it, has little in the way of philosophical thought underpinning it.

The event is part of what Father Kilcoyne calls the ‘Catholic Underground’, a part of the burgeoning undercurrent of renewed faith and dynamism of spirituality that is taking place away from the mainstream establishment. Impressed with the turnout and vibrancy in the room, Father Kilcoyne asks, ‘Who knew that Catholic Underground was so big?’

How fitting that it takes place in so meek yet powerful of a place as the Legion of Mary headquarters.

Starting from those humble beginnings in Dublin, the Legion of Mary grew to encompass presidiums in China, South America and Africa, surviving and even thriving amongst poverty, tyranny and violence.

Frank Duff, if you are not familiar with him, was a civil servant who had a remarkable perception of theology and of its practical implications within the world. He had worked for Michael Collins and later for WT Cosgrave during the early years of the state. The Legion of Mary may have an image of being non confrontational, but when it came to proclaiming the gospel, Duff’s zeal for apostolic work was anything but. Fr. Thomas O’Flynn C.M. wrote in his book Frank Duff As I Knew Him:

He had unflinching honesty in asserting what he believed to be the truth. Sometimes at the Pauline Circle, the ecumenical group run by the Legion, I would wince at the fortrightness with which he put forward the teaching of the church to our separated brethren. But even if they did not always agree with him they respected him for his honesty.

He was a fighter, never afraid to defend his corner when the interests of the faith or the Legion were at stake. This courage was part of the psychological gear necessary for his task. When he was launching the new movement in the lay apostolate that later became known as the Legion of Mary he had encountered opposition: sometimes from people in high places. A pioneer in any walk of life needs courage. Frank Duff had it in plenty.

Duff was largely overlooked by the hierarchy in Ireland and one can only wonder how different the history of Twentieth Century Catholicism in Ireland would have been had he been listened to.

In a talk published on the Iona Institute website, Duff’s biographer Finola Kennedy wrote of how Duff broke the norms of secular culture in trying to help unmarried mothers to gain stability in their lives, housing them in his hostel The Regina Coeli. She wrote:

Duff’s special sympathy for unmarried mothers was at odds with the mores of the time when the consequences of an extra-marital birth were disastrous, rendering both mother and child social outcasts. He was probably close to the view of the writer George Moore who in his powerful novel, Esther Waters written at the end of the nineteenth century, tells the story of a mother’s fight for the life of her illegitimate son. Moore wrote, ‘Hers is a heroic adventure if one considers it – a mother’s fight for the life of her child against all the forces that civilisation arrays against the lowly and the illegitimate’.

Anyone who has ever visited Frank Duff’s house in Dublin will notice that in his living room, one finds copies of National Geographic, travel books and encyclopedias concerning every part of the globe and various dictionaries for other languages. The inception of the Legion coincided with the birth of international travel through airplane and also the missions of Irish priests, particularly the Columbans, to the Far East and elsewhere.

One of the most famous examples of these was Fr. Aedan McGrath SSC.

In his book Navan to China, McGrath tells the story of Chinese Legionaries who exhibited profound faith as he had witnessed on countless occasions since his first arrival there in 1930. One of the most striking of these was one where he says:

Under the most trying of circumstances, the Legionaries behaved splendidly in every way. On one occasion a drunken Army Official, who was suspicious of the Praesidia meetings, wildly broke into a junior meeting when the young girls were reciting the Rosary. As he strode into the room, swearing vengeance on all and sundry, not one little head turned: the Legionaries continued their prayers uninterrupted under the leadership of the young girl President! As he surveyed the scene, the officer’s face changed completely, he removed his cap, bowed his head reverently and quietly left the room - conquered by a group of little Legionaries praying to the Mother of God!'

How proud I was of the behaviour and spirit of my Legionaries both on this occasion and at other times when bombs and shells were dropping thickly all around the Mission.

McGrath also told of how in 1946, Pope Pius XII had sent word to the Chinese church to follow the model of the Legion of Mary so as to reach millions of Chinese people with the Good News. Pius XII was not naive however and told them:

You are going to be expelled sometime and in the meantime it is vital that you build up a framework which will caretake the Church in your absence, and that instrument lies ready for you in the Legion.

The Chinese bishops became familiar with the Legion handbook as a means of educating themselves with this new tool. The Chinese Communist Party were completely terrified of the Legion of Mary, it put women into positions of authority, it had no clear centralised structure and it seemed to be spreading like wildfire. Most terrifyingly, it carried with it the name of ‘Legion’ and other Roman inspired paraphernalia.

They tried to paint the Legion as a tool of Imperialism in order to deter Chinese people from joining it.

McGrath writes:

The legion was charged with being ‘reactionary’ at several ‘accusation meetings’ convened by the city authorities. The accusations were sustained, but the ‘reasoning’ at these mass meetings followed the line that ‘foreign priests’ were influential in organising the various groups of Legionaries and since foreigners were imperialists, the Legion was therefore a tool of Imperialism.

At this point in time, the Legion had reached 90 dioceses in China. Such was the disdain towards their success, that the Chinese Communist Party referred to Frank Duff as ‘Ireland’s greatest imperialist’.

Fr. McGrath ended up being imprisoned and tortured by the Chinese Communist Party for 32 months in 1951. In his recollection of his interrogations, he talks about how the Chinese police held one meeting in a church and demanded to know about what the Legion meant by ‘conquering the world’.

The Legion grew rapidly also in Hong Kong, where it was reported that 74 presidia were in operation in 1954.

One of the core motivations for Duff to found and build the Legion of Mary was St. Louis Mary de Montfort’s True Devotion to Mary.

The Legion has three causes for canonisation, one of which was Alphonsus Lambe, who recognised the importance of De Montfort’s book when he travelled to Argentina. In her book Envoy Extraordinaire, Hilde Firtel writes:

Alfie breached a very thorny subject, namely the sentimental and unenlightened devotion to Our Lady that is occasionally found in Latin America. In Europe one hears criticism that some people have saved nothing of devotion to Catholicism save devotion to Our Lady. But this fact which is taken as true is taken as an excuse to deprecate devotion to Our Lady. This is to err in the opposite extreme.

Alfie proposed the remedy as acquainting the faithful with the ‘True Devotion’ of Saint Louis Marie De Montfort. This would give them a true picture of Our Lady’s role in God’s plan of salvation and would gradually rectify their ideas.

The centrality of De Montfort and the deep Marian spirituality of the Legion handbook are core aspects, which transmit profound theological truths to even the lay person.

Duff met a number of popes, but was largely unappreciated in his home country. Perhaps it was because of the uncomfortably prescience with which he could perceive the future for Ireland not just in spiritual terms but economic terms also:

Obviously all this constitutes a danger signal for us in Ireland. We have arrived at the point when taxation has become oppressive and We know it is going to get heavier. At what stage will it amount to a taking over of our ,entire lives by the State" Then there will be no more effort; no more initiative. An eminent man of our own times has said that it is impossible for a dishonest people to become a great nation. I would amplify this thought and say that a people which does not give value cannot hope to keep the Faith.

The mere contemplation of such a nest of problems is enough to paralyse. Solution must be attempted in a spirit of pure faith. The crisis is as great as any of the classic ones of the past. So Legionaries of Mary will, quite naturally, turn to her who is the help of Christians, the destroyer of all heresies, the woman of perpetual succour, to whom recourse has never been made unavailingly.

Duff foresaw that Ireland’s poor catechesis would eventually lead the slide towards atheism:

It has always been imagined by us that the Irish people have a unique regard for the Mass. Therefore it is a shock to encounter proofs to the contrary. I have now covered a good deal of the surface of the country and I tell you our experience in regard to daily Mass, which surely is the test of appreciation. The attendance is miserable in proportion. Yet in the smaller places there is nothing doing at that time and the majority could attend. I specify one case where we had a priest with us and offered a week-day Mass to a village which normally has one on Sunday only. Not a single local person turned up for it. Other places would be better but not much better. Does that sort of thing afford justification for our alleged love of the Mass?

Quite evidently that degree of religion is not going to stand up to the adverse influences which are every day thickening and marshalling themselves. Therefore we find ourselves at a crisis point of religion. The thought forces itself upon me: Is it possible that the tragedy of France and so many other countries is going to reproduce itself in Ireland? We are walking on a slippery slope at the moment. That cannot continue. It improves or it deteriorates-usually the latter.

It was not possible to save France. Portugal. Spain. Italy. Holland. all of which have lost the Faith in the main. Acute French observers coming here soon after the Second World War declared that they saw a remarkable likeness between the Ireland of that time and the France of two hundred years previously: the same characteristics and the same weakness. Two hundred years ago would have been the period in which France would have prided itself on being the most Catholic country in the world that is immediately preceding the French Revolution. The Revolution did not create all thy hollowness and the hatred of religion which then appeared. It only revealed what was there. It was like taking off a mask.

Spain and Portugal spread the Faith over great tracts of the world's surface but those supreme services to the Church did not mean that the keeping of the Faith was guaranteed to them in perpetuity. They plunged into the most hideous phase of anti-religion which could exist and set themselves to propagate it over the world. It could not be said that the people in those country is put up any fight worth while against that horror. After a little flurry of resistance they abandoned themselves to the irreligion which their governments decreed. Even though the more violent aspects of atheism have worn off, the percentage of belief and practice there is negligible and it cannot be claimed that things are improving.

Does that likeness of conditions discerned by the French observers suggest that we will in due course slide into what they have become? We would be insane if we just shrugged off that possibility.

The Legion of Mary was an antidote to all of this. In many countries across the world, it has been a successful antidote. In Ireland, there is still time for it to be so.

Legionaries across Ireland can still be found today, visiting hospitals, feeding the homeless and handing out miraculous medals on streets.

Duff may have had a profound impact on the rest of the world, but he had a special place in his heart for Ireland, including Joseph Mary Plunkett’s poem I See His Blood Upon the Rose with accompanying artwork at the back of the Legion of Mary handbook.

He saw that the mission of the Legion in Ireland was similar to that of the St. Columbanus and the apostles before them, to go purify within before going out into a chaotic world:

These poured out from their little Isle into that continental wilderness. They invaded nearly every part of it. They rebuilt the lost Faith, built it better than it was before because this time it depended on conviction and not on State scaffolding. They may be said to have made modern Catholicism. That was the Peregrinatio pro Christo.

They would have viewed their mission in a very different way from that in which the Apostles looked on theirs. Much more was known about the world than in the year 33. Christianity moreover had taken root. It might have been laid waste over most of the world but those monks would have seen that as a mere temporary calamity which must be repaired. Certainly ( the Faith was not suffering in Ireland. It was new there and boiling with fervour. The monks were providentially ready for a supreme adventure of that kind.

100 years on from its foundation, the Legion of Mary still has the potential to show the vision and determination that Duff embodied and that has sustained millions of Legionaries, many in secret in China, North Korea and elsewhere.

How blessed we are in Ireland to be able to claim this as our recent spiritual heritage.

You can watch the full video of the conference below:





Aussie Cops STORM Church During Mass

The International Lockdown of the past two years has led to many violations of civil rights, particularly among religious people.

In Ireland, anti Catholic politicians surrounded outdoor Rosary Rallies and set Gardai on people, Gardai also visited priests and issued warnings if a single person above the allowed amount attended a funeral and there was also the siege of Fr. PJ Hughes as he attempted to say Mass. The most shocking of all was the invasion of a church in Athlone last year, with the shocking images of Drew Harris’s men invading the sanctuary.

As much of the Western World winds down from the lockdown restrictions, one country is finding it hard to let go.

Australia has been home to some of the most horrific overreach of state authority, as exemplified by their recent show trial of Novak Djokovic.

Now, police in Western Australia have stormed Mass at St. Bernadette’s, Glendalough.

One parishioner shocked at the behaviour by the police commented:

“I mean I’ve never seen anything like this and I don’t think many people have, certainly not in this country.”

In images from the aggressive storming, police can be seen checking the vaccination and mask compliance of parishioners.

The parish later wrote on Facebook:

“You are not permitted to enter the Church unless you are wearing a mask,” he wrote in a social media post.

“If you have an exemption letter from your doctor, then please make certain that you carry this on you at all times. 

“Heavy fines on the parish priest, our parish and individuals will be incurred if you are caught without wearing your mask.  Please co-operate with this request so as to avoid any complications’’.

Australia has long been a hotbed of anti Catholicism. Even recently, authorities failed in efforts to frame Cardinal George Pell for abuse in a show trial that was eventually overturned when competent judges actually did their jobs and assessed evidence properly.

With much controversy rightfully questioning China’s human rights record ahead of the Winter Olympics, we have to ask ourselves are we becoming any better? The West is becoming as hostile to the faith and to civil rights as China is.

A Men’s Rosary Rally outside St. Mary’s Cathedral will now be offered in reparation for the Australian nation’s attack on the Mass.

Irish Pro Family Group to Host Synod Webinar

The following is a press release from Irish Pro Family group Family Solidarity:

Family Solidarity invites you to a webinar on “The Irish Synodal Pathway” with Bishop Brendan Leahy (Bishop of Limerick) and Dr Nicola Brady (Chair of the Steering Committee).

Thursday 3rd February 2022 at 7.00 pm on Zoom.

Request link by email to familysolidarityireland@gmail.com

Last year the Catholic Church in Ireland has begun a synodal pathway that will lead to a National Synodal Assembly in 2026. This is a period of prayer, listening and discussion about the past, the present and the future of the Church in Ireland. Bishop Leahy and Nicola Brady will present the timeline and the aims of the synodal pathway, and how families can contribute to it.

Are 'Catholic' Politicians More Moral?

Are Catholic Politicians more moral than the average politician?

I was surprised to learn from a recent Catholic Arena article that former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, had converted to Catholicism. I do not agree with Blair’s politics, but wish him well as a brother-in-Christ and pray that he has made peace with his decision to join the 2003 Iraq War.

Politicians are strange animals: they should be classified under Mammalia but many people rate them as Reptilia. An IPSOS 2019 survey looked at the public’s view of the trustworthiness of many professions world-wide. Politicians consistently scored badly.

Catholicus Politicus

The Blair article got me pondering on a particular species of politician: “Catholicus Politicus” — the Catholic Politician! Are Catholic Politicians more moral than the average politician? Sadly, the current Catholic politicians who immediately come to mind are zealots in their support of abortion: the President of the US, Joe Biden; Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau; the President of France, Emmanuel Macron and the Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, third-in-line for POTUS in an emergency.

Some suggest that Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister of the UK, is a ‘bad’ Catholic politician. Boris may be a hypocrite — drinking wine on a patio with co-workers while enforcing the lockdown on others — but as a miscreant he does not seem to rank in the ‘Premier League’ of offenders! (Boris was baptised Catholic; confirmed in the Church of England and is now on his third marriage, recently wed in Westminster Cathedral) With remarkable self-awareness, he noted: “Christianity is a superb ethical system and I would count myself as a kind of very, very bad Christian”.

I previously wrote about ‘devout’ Joe Biden receiving Communion, despite his zealotry for abortion.

Sinners, Penitents and the Holy Eucharist — Catholic Arena

When asked about a ‘good’ Catholic politician, most think of JFK. Kennedy was the first Catholic American President — 60 years ago. Kennedy advanced Civil Rights in America and started the Peace Corps but authorised the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba (planned by Eisenhower) and was the president to send the first Special Forces / a.k.a. “military advisors” into Vietnam in 1961. Add to this, we may never know the true story of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

In formerly Catholic countries (like Ireland) political parties often have many members who are nominally ‘catholic.’ Catholic voters should watch for the politicians who have sold their souls for votes or position.

Political Manifesto

Before the last US election, Pope Francis gave beautifully simple advice which can be applied to most any candidate.

“Study the proposals well, pray and choose in conscience.”

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops [USCCB] gave detailed guidance on selecting a candidate with an informed conscience. They produced a 53-page document “Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship” which is unfortunately long, though in particular the second section can help Catholic voters in any country. The USCCB topics are grouped under the headings of:

  • HUMAN LIFE.

  • PROMOTING PEACE.

  • MARRIAGE AND FAMILY LIFE.

  • RELIGIOUS FREEDOM.

  • PREFERENTIAL OPTIONS FOR THE POOR AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE.

  • HEALTH CARE. MIGRATION.

  • CATHOLIC EDUCATION.

  • PROMOTING JUSTICE AND COUNTERING VIOLENCE.

  • COMBAT UNJUST DISCRIMINATION.

  • CARE FOR OUR COMMON HOME.

  • COMMUNICATIONS, MEDIA; CULTURE.

  • GLOBAL SOLIDARITY.

(Individual topics are summarised in the Appendix.)

Discussion

If need be, please reference the additional material from the USCCB.

Beware of seemingly ‘benevolent’ summaries provided by others! I found one summary of the USCCB document from an anonymous group of “theological authors and lay Catholic ministers, to help spread the bishop’s document Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship. They provided a review of Biden and Trump’s platforms and though the authors mention that each issue does not have equal moral weighting, they ascribed 1 point for each of the 47 topics they had selected from the USCCB, as “Aligns” with the Catholic Church or “Does Not Align” for each candidate. (Other categories included “Inconclusive” or “Changed.”) Their tally was overly simplistic and biased in favour of Joe Biden. (Such as Biden’s support for 600,000+ abortions per annum being considered equivalent to Trump’s support of the Death Penalty: 22 death penalties were imposed in 2019.)

There were other issues. Biden got 5 “Aligns” points in the section on Migration. As president he halted construction of the wall on the southern US border, which allowed a major increase in illegal immigration. Many support him doing so, but it has increased the smuggling — and possibly the trafficking — of children. Also, 30 to 80% of the women who cross the border illegally are raped en route and many men and women are drafted into being drug mules because they cannot afford the $5,000-12,000 fee charged by the coyotes.

The anonymous group also gave Biden points under “Catholic Education” though he scorns the Church’s teaching on abortion: Yowzer!

Any list has weaknesses, the bishops said nothing about the life-saving benefits of Oil and Gas through heating, transportation, medication, etc. They only indirectly mentioned the damage to our natural resources when providing “Clean-Energy sources.” (e.g., a two-megawatt windmill uses 260 tons of steel from 300 tons of iron-ore and 170 tons of coking coal.)

Political Classification

I classify Catholic politicians into 3 groups:

1. Those who support Catholic values (often supporting Human Rights)

2. Those who take a (cowardly) “neutral” stance

3. Nominal Catholics whose policies conflict with Catholic teachings and often conflict with basic human rights.

Maybe we should classify ourselves first, before we classify the politicians! We need to answer honestly: do we promote Catholic values at the ballot-box? Generally, we get the politicians we deserve. Please vote wisely, where and whenever your next election may be!

By Dr. Kevin Hay

APPENDIX of USCCB topics for an informed conscience:

HUMAN LIFE:

Abortion

Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide

Cloning and destruction of Human Embryos

Genocide

Torture

Direct and intentional targeting of noncombatants in war or terrorist attacks

Misuse of Biotechnology and Human Experimentation

The Death Penalty

PROMOTING PEACE:

Avoid War and the promotion of Peace

Rejection of Torture

Avoid the preventative use of Military Force

Reverse the spread of Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological Weapons

Reallocation of resources to the urgent needs of the poor

MARRIAGE AND FAMILY LIFE:

Support a definition of marriage which recognizes and protects the lifelong commitment between a man and a woman (some references to GENDER issues)

Opposition to unjust discrimination against those who experience & ‘‘deep-seated homosexual tendencies’’ who ‘‘must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity’’

Valuing, protecting, and the nurturing of children

Family-supportive tax code, divorce laws, immigration and welfare policies

Just wages

Protection of children (with the right to grow up with a father & mother)

Opposition to contraceptive / abortion mandates in public health programs

RELIGIOUS FREEDOM:

Promotion of Religious Liberty (referencing persecutions in other countries)

PREFERENTIAL OPTIONS FOR THE POOR AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE:

Jobs for all who can work

Just wages

Removing barriers to equal pay & employment for women

Overcoming discrimination

Right of workers to organize (Join a union /collective bargaining)

Economic freedom, initiative and right to own private property

The reduction of social and economic inequalities

Legislation against exploitative interest rates.

Welfare policy reducing poverty and avoiding family breakdown

Welfare safety net: Income Tax & Child Tax Credits

Support of Faith Based Groups which work to support communities.

Social Security protections

Commitment to Affordable Housing (also supported by religious groups)

Agriculture Policy and Food Security for all

Sustainable agriculture / stewardship

HEALTH CARE:

Affordable and accessible Health Care

Strengthen Medicare & Medicaid

Compassionate care for HIV/AIDS and addictions

MIGRATION:

Care for ALL newcomers (authorized and unauthorized)

Comprehensive immigration reform

Broad and Fair legalization program; a path to Citizenship

Work program with just wages

Family reunification policies

Access to legal protections including Due Process

Refuge/Asylum for those fleeing persecution and violence

Policies to address the root causes of human trafficking (poverty, conflict, judicial breakdown)

Humane and just control of a nation’s borders

Immigrant detention only for public safety (not as deterrence or punishment.)

Special status for trafficked children.

CATHOLIC EDUCATION:

Parental right to choose the education for their children

Government support (tax credits/scholarships) helping parental choices

Moral and character formation consistent with parental beliefs

Quality education, for all

Just salaries and fair benefits for teachers

Equality of programming between public and private/religious schools.

PROMOTING JUSTICE AND COUNTERING VIOLENCE:

Moral responsibility and effective response to violent crime

Criminal Justice System reform (for remediation, rather than punishment)

Reasonable restrictions on access to assault weapons and handguns

Opposing the Death Penalty

COMBAT UNJUST DISCRIMINATION:

Combat any Unjust Discrimination (Race, Religion, Sex, Ethnicity, Disabling Condition, Age.)

Remove barriers to education

Protect voting rights

Good policing

Equal employment for women and minorities.

CARE FOR OUR COMMON HOME:

Protection of the land, water and air.

Energy conservation with development of alternative, renewable, and Clean-Energy sources

A call to address Climate Change

US to lead in the development of poorer nations

Address migration from environmental degradation/climate change.

Avoid coercive population control programs.

COMMUNICATIONS, MEDIA; CULTURE:

Promoting responsible regulation of electronic media (respecting freedom of speech yet addressing the

lowered standards which leading to offensive materials)

Support non-commercial religious programming

Limit the concentrated control of the Media

Resist the focus on profit

Support rating systems and parental supervision.

Vigorous enforcement of obscenity and child pornography laws

Improve the blocking technology for parents, schools and libraries.

GLOBAL SOLIDARITY:

Alleviation of Global Poverty and increased development aid

Relief of excessive debt and disease

Equitable trade policies

Promotion of religious liberty and human rights. (Defense of religious minorities around the world.)

Political and financial support for beneficial United Nations programs, other international bodies and international law

Asylum for refugees

Actively address regional conflicts

Specifically provide leadership in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (ensuring security for Israel; a viable state for Palestinians; respect for Lebanon and peace in the region.)

No Bodies Found At Canada 'Mass Grave'

When the Chinese Communist Party sought to stop the Christian faith’s growth in the mid Twentieth Century, they found it difficult to convince devout Catholics that their beliefs were incompatible with being a patriotic Chinese person.

Being Communists, they found it easy to lie about whatever it was that they needed in order to get the end result.

They devised two main lies to charge the Catholics with. One was that their faith was a form of imperialism and the second was that the nuns who cared for the poor children of China were actually guilty of infanticide and mass murder.

These same charges were levelled at the Irish church in 2018, as the church was called Imperialists despite the British and not the church establishing the Magdalene Laundries, and the nuns who minded tens of thousands of unwanted children for decades were accused of burying 800 babies in a septic tank, with no evidence. No bodies have ever been found, no dig ever carried out and evidence to the contrary has repeatedly refuted this claim, even as Ireland reaches record homelessness for children in 2022 under its woke regime.

In Canada, these same charges were furthered by media outlets last year, who provoked arson attacks against churches on a par with those immediately preceding the Spanish Civil War.

The claim was that large numbers of children had been buried in ‘mass graves’. One of the interesting things about this claim was that there was no possibility that someone could have ended up deceased at this time unless they had been murdered, with the church facing absurd accusations as they did in Ireland. A ‘cemetery’ became a ‘mass grave’ which then became ‘children murdered and dumped in mass grave’. Despite high mortality rates in poor people at this time, despite the fact that children were only in Residential Schools because there was such abject poverty at the time, Catholics were somehow made out to have kidnapped these children.

Now, a new article has gone viral after exploding the myth of what had allegedly taken place at this site. It notes that it was China of all people who furthered this narrative at UN level.

It gives a summary which asks the same questions which must be asked of the allegations that 800 babies were dumped into a septic tank in a building where they were cared for and where nuns were regularly receiving donations of coffins and even had a handyman on site to build coffins.

The summary reads:

t is hard to believe that a preliminary search for an alleged cemetery or mass grave in an apple orchard on reserve land near the residential school of Kamloops could have led to such a spiral of claims endorsed by the Canadian government and repeated by mass media all over the world. It gives a terrible and simplistic impression of complex issues in Canadian history. The exhumations have not yet begun and no remains have obviously been found. Imaginary stories and emotion have outweighed the pursuit of truth. On the road to reconciliation, isn’t the best way to seek and tell the whole truth rather than deliberately create sensational myths?

We encourage everyone to read this analysis, which offers a timely insight into this hysterical set of mistruths.

In Kamloops, Not One Body Has Been Found – The Dorchester Review

Cardinal Kung and the Legion of Mary

The centenary year of the Legion of Mary has made many Irish people sit up and take notice of the fact that the lay organisation provided some of the most astounding successes of the Irish church in the Twentieth Century.

Amassing tens of millions of members, providing care and spiritual support for millions more, the organisations trumps the falsified image of the Irish church as an insular and stagnant entity.

In China and North Korea, hundreds of thousands of members were either harassed, imprisoned or even killed for their faith by the Communist authorities. Irish priest Fr. Aedan McGrath was brutally treated by the Communists. Terrified of his influence over the Chinese Church that they wished to crush, the Communists declared that Legion founder Frank Duff was the ‘reactionary guardian of the interests of the ruling class’. McGrath was jailed for almost three years, enduring horrific treatment in the meantime.

Another famous Legionary in China was a native, Cardinal Ignatius Kung.

Ordained in 1930, Kung became a bishop in 1949. As bishop, he took over the mantel of promoting the Legion of Mary after Nuncio Antonio Ribero was expelled and prevented from continuing his work there. Kung realised that the Legion was necessary in order to promote an asymmetric ecclesiastical structure to compete with a large scale Communist takeover that would obliterate any visible Catholic worship. To make matters more complicated, the Communists setup the counterfeit ‘Patriotic Church’.

Kung resisted the establishment of this fake church and was arrested for it in 1955. Upon arrest he defiantly exclaimed:

Long live Christ the King, Long Live the Pope

Interned for five years, he was sentenced to life in prison in 1960.

Kung and McGrath had known each other in China and in fact Kung was very encouraging towards McGrath’s work both before and after the Irishman had come to Shanghai. The Legion grew rapidly, with the alarmed Communists declaring that Legionaries were:

running dogs of the U.S. imperialists under the cloak of religion, and an anti-revolutionary, subversive organization

Many Legionaries, including Shanghai Legion President Francis TS Shen, were executed by the Communists. Others faced decades of hard labour. The Communists had smelled the power of the Legion, they had seen Cardinal Kung rally 3,000 young men to their cathedral with 1,000 women praying the Rosary. The demonic spirit that infests the Communist mentality sensed the holiness of Kung and of the wider Legion and sought to remove it.

In 1957, Fulton Sheen wrote of Kung:

The West has its Mindszenty, but the East has its Kung. God is glorified in His saints

In 1979, Pope John Paul II had him declared a Cardinal in secret. In 1991, he was able to receive his red hat in person after his eventual release, following 30 years of imprisonment.

His bravery, fortitude and faith in the face of the Communist machine were exemplary of the Legion’s mission and its quiet hope in Our Lady’s assistance with our prayers to Our Lord.

They are a reminder that the Irish church’s history in the Twentieth Century is much deeper than the shallow caricatures of self loathing Irish journalists who seek to rewrite the past in order to assuage their own guilt about their secular country’s less than admirable present.

After School Satanist Club

Last month, Christians were around the world were shocked after the United States of America allowed Satanists to host a shrine to a baby demon in Illinois Capital Building.

Now, a school in the same state is allowing Satanists to offer an after school Satanist Club to small children.

Lucien Greaves, co-founder of the Satanic Temple said of the plans.

If you’re going to open the public forum up to one religion, you open it up to all of them

The idea is to exploit the American concept of ‘religious freedom’ in order to swamp public spaces as a means of claiming territory for Satan.

In an interview with Fox News, American Catholic Youtuber stated that this occurrence should shame Catholics into reclaiming their public spaces.

While kickstarting this iniative in 2016, the Satanic Temple told the Washington Post

They’re here plotting to bring their wisdom to the nation’s public elementary school children. They point out that Christian evangelical groups already have infiltrated the lives of America’s children through after-school religious programming in public schools, and they appear determined to give young students a choice: Jesus or Satan.

One Evangelical group who organises after school clubs for local kids was quoted as endorsing the Satanist group, telling local media:

sure, this is America. Everyone has freedom of speech. The Supreme Court ruled [that] all groups have equal access to schools

This indifference should never be the perspective of any Catholic.

Satan should be opposed at every juncture.

Saint Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle. Be our protection against the wickedness and snares of the devil; May God rebuke him, we humbly pray; And do thou, O Prince of the Heavenly Host, by the power of God, thrust into hell Satan and all evil spirits who wander through the world for the ruin of souls. Amen

Tony Blair Knighthood Is An Insult to Christians

My spiritual journey began when I began going to Mass with my wife. And when we decided to baptize our children in the Catholic faith. It's a path which has taken 25 years, and maybe longer. Over time, emotionally, intellectually and rationally it became clear that the Catholic Church was the right home for me. But it happened after a very long period of time. When I left my political post, and no longer had all the tensions linked to being prime minister, it was something I wanted to do.

It would be unfair to suggest that Tony Blair’s Catholicism is a mere veneer, or to say that it has originated from a place of insincerity within him.

Nonetheless, it is worth mentioning his conversion while considering the reason for which he has made the news this past week. The announcement that Queen Elizabeth II had included him in her list of honours has caused widespread disgust, with one million people quickly signing a petition of opposition.

When Blair made the fateful decision to join George W. Bush and the United States in their illegal invasion of Iraq in 2003, he was not a practicing Catholic, though his wife was. Yet, the horrific decision to willingly commit war crimes was to have consequences for people of faith across the world. Initially cast in Islamic media as a ‘crusade’, the criminal invasion was the most devastating single event to happen to any Christian population in this century.

As Christian Iraqis huddled in fear inside their homes in March 2003, they crouched together in terror and breathlessly counted down the seconds until the deadline set by the United States came into effect.

Saddam Hussein had been given 48 hours to leave Iraq by US President George W. Bush. The conditions were academic, Bush was ready to strike regardless, having ensured the cooperation of a vast array of characters including the New York Times and Joe Biden, to create the blatant lie that Iraq had been readied to unleash Weapons of Mass Destruction. Outside of the States, Fabian Society member Tony Blair rowed in behind Bush’s lies. Blindsided, most of the West was left powerless to oppose those who were exploiting the terror elicited by the sight of those planes crashing into the Twin Towers in 2001, apart from France’s Jacques Chirac.

At 2.30 on the morning of March 20th, the first explosions could be heard inside the historic city. A ‘bunker’ believed to have contained Saddam Hussein was amongst the targets heavily bombed by the jets, a ‘bunker’ which it was later revealed to have been entirely fictitious.

Journalist Robert Fisk detailed these attacks from within Iraq:

It was an outrage, an obscenity. The severed hand on the metal door, the swamp of blood and mud across the road, the human brains inside a garage, the incinerated, skeletal remains of an Iraqi mother and her three small children in their still-smouldering car.

It’s a dirt-poor neighbourhood, of mostly Shia Muslims, the same people whom Messrs Bush and Blair still fondly hope will rise up against President Saddam Hussein, a place of oil-sodden car-repair shops, overcrowded apartments and cheap cafes. Everyone I spoke to heard the plane. One man, so shocked by the headless corpses he had just seen, could only say two words. “Roar, flash,” he kept saying and then closed his eyes so tight that the muscles rippled between them.

How should one record so terrible an event? Perhaps a medical report would be more appropriate. But the final death toll is expected to be near to 30 and Iraqis are now witnessing these awful things each day; so there is no reason why the truth, all the truth, of what they see should not be told.

For another question occurred to me as I walked through this place of massacre yesterday. If this is what we are seeing in Baghdad, what is happening in Basra and Nassiriyah and Kerbala? How many civilians are dying there too, anonymously, indeed unrecorded, because there are no reporters to be witness to their suffering?

These were the sufferings of the Iraqi people as a whole, but the sufferings of the Christians of Iraq were entirely unique and entirely awful.

Early in the war, Christians began to be targeted by Islamists, leading to many having to either flee the country or face certain violence. The full scale of this nightmarish crescendo became apparent in 2008, when Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho was kidnapped in Mosul, murdered by Islamists and dumped in a shallow grave.

Another priest, Fr. Ragheed Ganni, was was shot dead in a church in Mosul after refusing to convert to Islam. He has celebrated his first Mass at the Irish College in Rome, which now depicts his image on the wall alongside St. Oliver Plunkett and others martyrs for the faith.

There are countless other stories. Take for example that of 3 year old Christian boy Adam, who begged terrorists ‘enough’ after they had murdered his family and others. He was shot dead by them.

To the Christians of the Middle East, this is the legacy of Tony Blair’s political career. This is the legacy which Queen Elizabeth II has decided to honour.

Perhaps Tony Blair the Catholic has repented of these abominable war crimes, comparable to any of the horrors of the Twentieth Century. However, even if he already has, he should do the right thing and turn down this insult to the Christian peoples of the Middle East.

They have suffered enough.

Children Are Better Than Pets - Pope Francis

Pope Francis has had some strong words to say on parenthood during his general audience at the Vatican today.

Today we will reflect on Saint Joseph as the father of Jesus. The evangelists Matthew and Luke present him as the foster father of Jesus, and not as his biological father. Matthew specifies this, avoiding the formula “the father of”, used in the genealogy for all the ancestors of Jesus; instead, he defines Joseph as the “husband of Mary, of whom Jesus was born, who is called Christ” (1:16). Luke, on the other hand, affirms it by saying that he was Jesus’ “supposed” father (3:23), that is, he appeared as His father,

To understand the alleged or legal paternity of Joseph, it is necessary to bear in mind that in ancient times in the East the institution of adoption was very common, more so than today. One thinks of the common case in Israel of the “levirate”, as formulated in Deuteronomy: “If brothers dwell together, and one of them dies and has no son, the wife of the dead shall not be married outside the family to a stranger; her husband’s brother shall go in to her, and take her as his wife, and perform the duty of a husband’s brother to her. And the first son whom she bears shall succeed to the name of his brother who is dead, that his name may not be blotted out of Israel” (25:5-6). In other words, the parent of this child is the brother-in-law, but the legal father remains the deceased, who gives the newborn child all hereditary rights. The purpose of this law was twofold: to ensure the descendants of the deceased and the preservation of the estate.

As the official father of Jesus, Joseph exercises the right to impose a name on his son, legally recognising him. Legally he is the father, but not generatively; he did not beget Him.

In ancient times, the name was the compendium of a person’s identity. Changing one’s name meant changing oneself, as in the case of Abraham, whose name God changed to “Abraham”, which means “father of many”, “for”, says the Book of Genesis, he will be “the father of a multitude of nations” (17:5). The same goes for Jacob, who would be called “Israel”, which means “he who struggles with God”, because he struggled with God to compel Him to give him the blessing (cf. Gen 32:29; 35:10).

But above all, naming someone or something meant asserting one’s authority over what was named, as Adam did when he conferred a name on all the animals (cf. Gen 2:19-20).

Joseph already knows that, for Mary’s son, a name had already been prepared by God – Jesus’ name is given to him by his true father, God – “Jesus”, which means “the Lord saves”; as the Angel explains, “He will save his people from their sins” (Mt 1:21). This particular aspect of Joseph now enables us to reflect on fatherhood and motherhood. And this, I believe, is very important: thinking about fatherhood today. Because we live in an age of notorious orphanhood, don’t we? It is curious: our civilization is something of an orphan, and this orphanhood can be felt. May Saint Joseph, who took the place of the real father, God, help us to understand how to resolve this sense of orphanhood that is so harmful to us today.

It is not enough to bring a child into the world to also be the child’s father or mother. “Fathers are not born, but made. A man does not become a father simply by bringing a child into the world, but by taking up the responsibility to care for that child. Whenever a man accepts responsibility for the life of another, in some way he becomes a father to that person” (Apostolic Letter Patris corde). I think in a particular way of all those who are open to welcome life by way of adoption, which is such a generous and beautiful, good attitude. Joseph shows us that this type of bond is not secondary; it is not an afterthought, no. This kind of choice is among the highest forms of love, and of fatherhood and motherhood. How many children in the world are waiting for someone to take care of them! And how many married couples want to be fathers and mothers but are unable to do so for biological reasons; or, although they already have children, they want to share their family’s affection with those who do not have it. We should not be afraid to choose the path of adoption, to take the “risk” of welcoming children. And today, with orphanhood, there is a certain selfishness. The other day, I spoke about the demographic winter there is nowadays, in which we see that people do not want to have children, or just one and no more. And many, many couples do not have children because they do not want to, or they have just one – but they have two dogs, two cats… Yes, dogs and cats take the place of children. Yes, it’s funny, I understand, but it is the reality. And this denial of fatherhood or motherhood diminishes us, it takes away our humanity. And in this way civilization becomes aged and without humanity, because it loses the richness of fatherhood and motherhood. And our homeland suffers, as it does not have children, and, as it has been said somewhat humorously, “and now who will pay the taxes for my pension, if there are no children?”: with laughter, but it is the truth. Who will take care of me? I ask of Saint Joseph the grace to awaken consciences and to think about this: about having children. Fatherhood and motherhood are the fullness of the life of a person. Think about this. It is true, there is the spiritual fatherhood of those who consecrated themselves to God, and spiritual motherhood; but those who live in the world and get married, think about having children, of giving life, which they will take from you for the future. And also, if you cannot have children, think about adoption. It is a risk, yes: having a child is always a risk, either naturally or by adoption. But it is riskier not to have them. It is riskier to deny fatherhood, or to deny motherhood, be it real or spiritual. But denial, a man or woman who do not develop the sense of fatherhood or motherhood, they are lacking something, something fundamental, something important. Think about this, please.

I hope that the institutions will always be ready to help regarding adoption, by seriously monitoring but also simplifying the necessary procedure so that the dream of so many children who need a family, and of so many couples who wish to give themselves in love, can come true. Some time ago I heard the testimony of a person, a doctor – an important profession – who did not have children, and he and his wife decided to adopt one. And when the time came, they were offered a child, and they were told, “But we do not know how this child’s health is. Perhaps he has an illness”. And he said – I saw him – he said, “If you had asked me about this before coming, perhaps I would have said no. But I have seen the child: I will take him with me”. This is the longing to be an adoptive father, to be an adoptive mother too. Do not be afraid of this.

I pray that no one feel deprived of the bond of paternal love. And those who are afflicted with orphanhood, may they go forward without this unpleasant feeling. May Saint Joseph protect, and give his help to orphans; and may he intercede for couples who wish to have a child. Let us pray for this together:

Saint Joseph,
you who loved Jesus with fatherly love,
be close to the many children who have no family
and who long for a daddy and mommy.
Support the couples who are unable to have children,
help them to discover, through this suffering, a greater plan.
Make sure that no one lacks a home, a bond,
a person to take care of him or her;
and heal the selfishness of those who close themselves off from life,
that they may open their hearts to love.
Thank you.

Top 10 Catholic Images of 2021

2021 was a strange year for Catholicism.

The Latin Mass was suppressed, every Sacrament was suppressed for much of the year here in Ireland (even as government officials jetted around the world) and yet, there were many scenes of Catholics proudly defending their churches from secular attacks.

Here are 10 images that defined the year.

10. Pope Francis sitting in the ruins of Mosul, Iraq.

The city was home to the worst of the persecutions and crucifixions by ISIS, after the illegal war of the UK and the USA unleashed hell for Christians in the Middle East. 81% of Christians in Iraq were killed or expelled because of the results of the war crimes of the UK and USA.

9. Myanmar nun calls for end to violence.

This image went viral in 2021 as a Catholic nun begged police and soldiers to stop targeting civilians in Myanmar.

8. Sydney Catholic Defend Church.

St. Mary’s Cathedral was home to a deliberate attack on the Catholic faith earlier this year, with an anti Catholic concert scheduled for outside its grounds. A number of Catholics rallied to defend the beautiful building and successfully repelled any would be attackers.

7. Mass Rock

The Franciscan Friars of the Renewal were among a number of Irish priests who answered the unjust persecution of the Globalist government with a return to Ireland’s Mass Rocks, where the faith was said in secret for centuries.

6. Irish Men’s Rosary Rally

Newry was one of a number of locations where Irish men drew large crowds at Rosary Rallies.

5. Irish State Stages Siege Against Mass

Fr. PJ Hughes had his whole village swarmed by Gardai in order to stop individuals from attending Mass, even as government officials partied hard into the long hours to celebrate Ireland being named on the UN Security Council. An interesting anecdote is that one local newspaper published this story, right beside the curious republishing of an historic article celebrating Freemasonry in the town.

The image sent shockwaves throughout the world, with the rest of the world marvelling at the deep seethed hatred for the Catholic faith that was held by the Irish government.

4. French police watch Nanterre church.

After a procession was attacked with priests spat on and threats of beheadings, this church in Nanterre was among many watched by police and soldiers in France in December as the once great country continued to come apart at the seems.

3. Locked out Irish Catholics Pray Outside Church

As the Irish government worked hard to clamp down on the worship of Catholics in 2021, not everyone took it lying down. With thousands eventually lining up outside their churches each Sunday to pray when they were barred from Mass.

2. Latin Mass Pilgrimage in Rome

Despite bullying from a number of clerics and Anglo-American commentators, huge numbers travelled to Rome for the Summorum Pontificum pilgrimage once more this year.

  1. Gardai STORM Latin Mass in Athlone.

Garda Commissioner Drew Harris, who is a Northern Irish Protestant, came under severe criticism for this devastating attack on the faith, when his force dared to enter the sanctuary of the Catholic faith. It was a disgusting mistake, which the Garda Commissioner has still refused to publicly apologise for.

Newsweek Links BLM and Pro Aborts To Attacks on Catholic Churches

In 2020, Black Lives Matter leader and Protestant Pastor Shaun King put out the closest thing that that movement had to a fatwa. The target of his ire? The Catholic faith.

In frightening echoes of how Irish and other European Catholics were treated by the Ku Klux Klan and other Anglo Protestant groups, King unleashed his frightening tirade on social media, writing:

Yes, I think the statues of the white European they claim is Jesus should also come down.

They are a form of white supremacy.

Always have been.

In the Bible, when the family of Jesus wanted to hide, and blend in, guess where they went?

EGYPT!

Not Denmark.

Tear them down.

In a brave article, Newsweek have pointed out the absurd nature of the BLM movement’s antipathy towards the Catholic faith:

In 2019, before the societal breakdown that happened with the start of the pandemic and the Black Lives Matter riots in the first half of 2020, 37 cases of vandalism or arson on Catholic property were reported to the FBI, according to the National Catholic Register. This was about the same amount as anti-Muslim vandalism (31 cases) but minuscule compared with antisemitic vandalism (684 cases).

All this changed in May 2020, when demonstrators protesting the death of George Floyd went after Catholic churches, such as Our Lady of Mount Lebanon–St. Peter Cathedral in Los Angeles, defacing it with graffiti that said, "Make America pay for its crimes against black lives." They also tore down statues of St. Junípero Serra.

During an orgy of violence in the second week of July, multiple Catholic sites across the country were hit, including an arson-related fire that destroyed much of the interior of the 249-year-old Mission San Gabriel Arcángel in San Gabriel, California. In October, protestors pulled down and defaced a statue of Serra at the nearby Mission San Rafael Arcángel, a move that infuriated San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone, who called for the perpetrators to be punished to deter others from defacing Catholic property.

Commenting on the article, Thomas Reese SJ claims that ‘What we have here is not so much anti-Catholicism as anti-clericalism’, which seems strange given the attacks on statues of Our Lady.

The article then states that abortion is the most common reason for attacks on churches.

It then points out that the current violence against Catholics in the United States is not dissimilar from the treatment of Jews prior to the Holocaust:

Some worry that increased vandalism of a religious group unused to such treatment is the first sign of a society ripping apart at the seams. Before German Jews got shipped off to concentration camps, there was the infamous Kristallnacht on November 9-10, 1938, when Nazi thugs, aided by civilians, destroyed or ransacked some 7,000 Jewish-owned businesses, along with hospitals, schools, homes and synagogues.

Two very important things are then pointed out:

  • The reluctance of mainstream media to cover the violence

  • The fact that most violence is taking place in states controlled by the Democratic Party

It compares this situation to France, where Catholics had to attend religious services under armed protection this Christmas, after recent beheadings and attacks on processions.

Christianity is the most persecuted religion in the world, because it is the most true, there is no reason to think that this persecution should be geographically confined.

Arson, Graffiti and More: Vandals Increasingly Target Catholic Churches (newsweek.com)

Leaders Criticise 'Systematic Attempt' To Drive Christians from Holy Land

In a powerful statement , Christian leaders in the Holy Land have heavily criticised increasing violence against their people in the region.

The hard hitting message criticised ‘frequent and sustained attacks by fringe radical groups’. This included attacks at Easter at the Mount of Olives and elsewhere. They then mentioned Holy Sites being ‘regularly vandalised and desecrated’. This, they said, was part of a ‘systematic attempt to drive the Christian community out of Jerusalem and other parts of the Holy Land’.

The statement also pointed out that the Israeli government had failed to stop those who ‘regularly initimidate local Christians, assault priests and clergy, and desecrate Holy Sites and church properties’.

Worryingly, they stated that although the Jewish Quarter had special protection under law, there was no such protections for the Christian areas of the city. They pointed out that these ‘radical groups’ were not acquiring ‘strategic property in the Christian Quarter, with the aim of diminishing the Christian presence, often using underhanded dealings and intimidation tactics to evict residents from their homes, dramatically decreasing the Christian presence and further disrupting the historic pilgrim routes between Bethlehem and Jerusalem’.

They made a call for dialogue with an aim to establishing two things:

  • To deal with radical ultra Jewish violence against Christians

  • To ensure the maintenance and safety of the presence of the Christian Quarter and its heritage

The Spokesperson for the Israeli Ministry for Foreign Affairs called the claims ‘baseless’.

Lior Haiat stated that the Christian community in Israel is growing, which is true overall, but in East Jerusalem they are not, this is what the church leaders were trying to address. He then called the message ‘infuriating’ and warned that it ‘could lead to violence and bring harm to innocent people’.

Many of the attacks that the Christian leaders were referring to have been led by Bentzi Gopshtain and his organisation Lehava. Lehava are opposed to allowing anyone other than Israeli Jews to be allowed to assimilated within Jerusalem and surround regions. In 2015, the church filed an official complaint against Lehava after he appeared to call for Catholic churches to be burnt to the ground, stating:

The law is straightforward: Maimonides’ interpretation is that one must burn idolatry. There’s not a single rabbi that would deliberate that fact. I expect the government of Israel to carry that out

In 2015, they organised a violent protest against a Christian event at an Armenian Church in the city.

Israeli settlers have also regularly been caught on CCTV spitting on the Armenian Church in Jerusalem.

The Armenian Christian community have repeatedly been victims of these targets, once having to report of constant spitting being sent in their direction.

Last Christmas, it was the church at Gethsemene which faced an arson attack from these extremists.

One Jewish media outlet, JWire responded to the calls by Christian leaders by stating that it was an:

anti-Israel political ploy that should be rejected by Israel.

They also published this cartoon that criticised the Christian leaders and referred to them as ‘weasles’.

USA Allows Satanists to Install Mock Nativity Display

The United States of America has allowed sick Satanists to install a shrine to demons in mockery of Our Lord Jesus Christ at the Illinois State Capitol.

Citing so called ‘religious freedom’, cowardly politicians have refused to stop the sick display from being established.

The organisers of the demonic installation, the Satanic Temple, taunted local Bishop Thomas Paprocki by inviting him to witness the event.

The bishop stated that the Satanic filth:

should have no place in this Capitol or any other place

A spokesperson for the Diocese told the media:

Mocking the millions of Christians in the state of Illinois and billions around the world by depicting the baby Jesus this Christmas with the ‘satanic deity’ Baphomet is the very definition of evil and causing division, but that is to be expected from an organization that is in existence to troll people of faith

“Bishop Paprocki declines the invitation to associate with evil and urges all people of true religious faith to shun the devil

There is no other country in the world where this sort of behaviour would be tolerated by Christians. The United States of America is the only nation where open devil worship is permitted in such an important building at Christmas time. There is not a Muslim, Communist or atheistic country that excuses this behaviour, so why does the United States allow for it? Why has the nominally Catholic President of the Untied States said nothing?

Irish Group to Host Webinar on Upcoming Synod

Family Solidarity will host a webinar with Sr Nathalie Becquart, under-secretary of the Synod of the Bishop in Rome, and Dr Vincenzo Bassi, president of the European Federation of Catholic Families Organisations (FAFCE).

In October, Pope Francis called the Catholic Church to embark on the synodal journey, asking for a broad participation, particularly at the local level. Sr Nathalie will talk about the role of the family, and of family organisations, in this process of spiritual discernment.

“Synodality is a call for mutual listening between all the members of the Church, and inspired by the Holy Spirit. Encouraged by the opening of the Synod, family associations wish to become protagonists of the synodal movement initiated by Pope Francis. In the same way that family members care for each other and move forward in a common understanding of unity, family associations wish today to work within the Church to create a true path of unity and communion for the common good.”, said Vincenzo Bassi of FAFCE.

He added: “This webinar is a way that FAFCE and Family Solidarity have to raise awareness about the responsibility that Christians and, specifically, our organisations have in this goal in the first instance, by working to create a network of encounters between families and by developing Family Associations. In fact, as Pope Francis said at the opening of the synodal path, “As we initiate this process, we too are called to become experts in the art of encounter. Not so much by organizing events or theorizing about problems, as in taking time to encounter the Lord and one another“.”

The webinar will take place on Thursday 9th December at 7.00 pm (Irish time) and it will be moderated by journalist Jason Osborne (Irish Catholic). Dr Angelo Bottone, chairman of Family Solidarity, will make the closing remarks.

The event will be livestreamed on the FAFCE Youtube and Facebook pages.

For ZOOM registration and more details, see https://familysolidarity.org/synodality/



 

The Empire of Evil Nears Defeat

Let us pray for the salvation of all of those who live in that totalitarian darkness—pray they will discover the joy of knowing God. But until they do, let us be aware that while they preach the supremacy of the State, declare its omnipotence over individual man, and predict its eventual domination of all peoples on the earth, they are the focus of evil in the modern world .... So, in your discussions of the nuclear freeze proposals, I urge you to beware the temptation of pride—the temptation of blithely declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault, to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an evil empire, to simply call the arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good and evil.

Ronald Reagan’s famous designation of the USSR as an ‘Evil Empire’ was no doubt an apt description of the Communist Totalitarian regime of the time. So apt, that it was not uncommon to contrast Communism with its opposite, the ‘Free World’.

For Reagan, the USSR embodied everything that impinged upon man’s freedom, it stifled creativity, it threatened violence without limits and posited a doomsday concept of permanent revolution and global control.

Yet Reagan could scarcely have foreseen the depraved moral descent of his United States at the turn of the Twentieth First Century. Illegal wars in the Middle East, as barbaric and unjustifiable as anything that Joseph Stalin committed, coupled with a permanent degeneration of basic morals with a concerted effort to corrupt every other nation in the process, have made the USA anything other than a shining city upon a hill. It is less a beacon of hope and more a bad example not be emulated.

As per Our Lady of Fatima’s warnings, the legalisation of abortion by Communists in Russia in 1917 set in motion events that would eventually lead to the Roe vs Wade ruling by the USA’s Supreme Court in 1973. Russia indeed spread her errors throughout the world in the Twentieth Century, but in the Twenty First, it is the United States that carries the heavy load of continuing the work of against the unborn that was started by Vladimir Lenin. It dangles money in front of poor countries if only they will abandon their family values and murder their own children in the womb. It asks of countries in Africa and South America, and one could say even Ireland, that they join the United States in killing their own babies in the womb. Its means of ‘asking’ are of the kind expected from a pimp or a drug dealer, it is the company sought by the miserable, it is the desire to unite the despondent by means of iniquity.

The USA’s love of abortion has seeped across the world, its prominence in the world has helped to make the violent act a staple of the West’s decline. Take for example the United Kingdom, where 1 in 4 pregnancies now ends in the destruction of the baby by the NHS. In nearby Ireland, the birth rate has completely collapsed with the advent of abortion, to the point now where it is well below replacement levels.

The numbers of abortions in the United States are simply staggering, they stand at almost one million per year. These depraved numbers recall the worst regimes in history, eclipsing even the worst crimes of the Americas under the human sacrifices of the Aztecs, both in volume and violence. That is not to even mention the depths to which some of these abortionists have sunk, such as mass murderer Kermit Gosnell who clipped the spines of babies with a scissors and kept their remains in jars that were found seeping onto the floor of his practice. One would be hard pressed to hear such stories on a guided tour of a concentration camp or a gulag. The excesses of violence that occurs in the abortion industry of the United States are of the sort which were predicted by Archbishop Fulton Sheen as being the logical result from the usage of the atomic bomb in 1945, with it the justification of unlimited evil as a means to an end. This is the evil that led to Abu Ghraib and other recent atrocities.

After almost a half century of genocide against their own unborn children, the first chink of light in trying to undo this great evil occurred in 2016, with the unexpected election of Donald Trump as the President of the United States. Much of the crazed and irrational overreaction and opposition to his term in office was motivated in both temporal and spiritual terms by opposition to his ability to elect Supreme Court Judges willing to put and end to Roe vs. Wade. Think of the many openly demonic forces who declared their opposition to his presidency in no uncertain terms, with many openly declaring their affinity for invoking occult practices in trying to bring about an end to it.

Now, despite the election of pro abortion Joe Biden and the mostly underwhelming contributions of apparent ultra Catholic Supreme Court Judges Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, Roe vs Wade is close to being aborted. Instigated by recent prolife successes in Mississippi and Texas, the Supreme Court judges now appear ready to tell the US abortion industry that they are ready to exercise their choice over them. Abortions could very well be limited to the point of being virtually illegal.

It is safe to say that pro abortion campaigners in the United States are not taking this well, reduced to babbling humourless messes in their efforts to articulate opposition, such as this reprobate low IQ effort from a once popular tv show. Such depraved and unimaginative propaganda will be studied for centuries to come. Sin has stifled the creativity of the United States more than any Communist edict ever could.

After a half century of massacring innocent babies, the United States might finally be ready to grow up and behave like a civilised nation, rather than as an Evil Empire committed to the physical, moral and spiritual destruction of human beings, of the kind that Reagan could scarcely foresee.

Perhaps now, the scales with fall from their collective eyes and they will cherish their children, from womb to natural death. Perhaps now, they will save themselves trillions on blindly annihilating the children of the Middle East. Perhaps now, those who prayed and prayed for an end to this enduring crime will see this evil stopped.

Each of us is loved, willed and necessary from conception until we return to the hands of the same God who created us.

In Luke’s Gospel, it is an unborn baby that is the first to recognise Our Lord’s presence upon the Earth. God can use the weak to shame the strong.


Keeping The Spirit of Christmas by GK Chesterton

The following essay was first published by The Illustrated London News on St. Stephen’s Day in 1925 and it conveys GK Chesterton’s thoughts on commercial efforts at trying to create a Christmas without Christianity.

An article on "Christmas Old and New" appeared recently in a magazine, and said many things that many people are probably saying just now. I do not say they are very lucid things, but they revolve round a reality and something sincerely if vaguely felt.

They raise all the talk about tradition and change; about keeping the spirit but not the letter; about suiting something to modern conditions, and so on. We have heard a good deal about these things; unfortunately, we have not heard much sense about them.

For it has become a convention to say we must disregard conventions; and the demand for something new is already old enough to be in its dotage or (if we had luck) in its coffin. But I notice one rather queer paradox about all this talk of change or reform in customs like Christmas. People talk about sacrificing the letter and keeping the spirit; and then go and do exactly the opposite. They keep a few fragmentary letters (which no longer make a word) and then sacrifice the spirit altogether.

Now the difficulty in all talk about the letter and the spirit is that a man who goes by the spirit must be very sure that he does really understand the spirit. And in my little local experience, the man generally does not. To take a parallel, a sceptic might ask what is the permanent value of the particular forms of good manners that go to make up what is conventionally called a gentleman. He might say he wished to alter the letter of certain little observances, but keep the spirit of the social and historical type. He might say, "Need a gentleman take off his hat to a lady? Need he take it off on entering another man's house?" To which the universal philosopher will reply, "No, of course not. He might take off his boots. The Arabs already do it in the case of the house, when Arabs are so fortunate as to have any houses. And, although it would be tiresome to sit down on the pavement and unlace one's boots while an obliging lady stood still and patiently waited to be saluted, of course that symbol would do as well as any other symbol, if it were socially accepted as symbolising respect." That would be really to alter the letter but keep the spirit. But I do not observe that this is what the more casual or callous youths of the rising generation tend to do.

I do not observe many of them prostrating themselves on the pavement, or standing on their heads in the street (to show how completely the lady's beauty has bowled them over), or in any other fashion experimenting in new modes of expression for the chivalric sentiment. They are not inventing new forms for an old feeling; they are doing just the reverse. They are ignoring the old feeling, but preserving a few limp remains of the old forms.

Now suppose a man, when entering by his friend's front door, were to toss his hat off with a jerk and leave it lying in the middle of the floor. His gesture would not be, like the removal of his boots, a new gesture or antic to express respect. It would simply be the old antic without the respect. It would be going through the old arbitrary action in such a way as to make it mean the opposite of what it was supposed to mean. Suppose a young man were to stroll up to a lady with his hands in his pockets and tell her to take off his hat for him and hold it in the air for a few seconds before replacing it on his head. It would not be a new way of expressing courtesy, but an old way distorted to express discourtesy.

Now I do not say that the unconventional young man of fact and fiction is going quite so far as this; but what amuses me is that, so far as he goes, he is not repudiating the forms of courtesy to keep the soul of chivalry; he is rather repudiating chivalry and keeping a few of the merely mechanical and meaningless gestures of courtesy. Our latest romance of cocktails and rapid dramas is not unconventional; it is only languidly conventional. It is not a school of new manners; it is only old manners modified and softened by bad manners.

Now I notice the same contradiction about Christmas—and, indeed, about Christian traditions generally. It is apparent in the people who tell us, in the papers and elsewhere, that they have emancipated themselves from dogmas, and propose to live by the spirit of Christianity. To which I reply: "All right—go ahead," or words to that effect. But then I always find myself confronted with this extraordinary fact. They start out to live by the spirit of Christianity, and proceed to fling themselves with frenzy into preventing poor people from getting any beer, preventing oppressed nations from defending themselves against tyrants (because it might lead to war), tearing backward children away from their heart-broken parents and locking them up in some sort of materialistic madhouse, and so on. And then they are quite surprised when I tell them that I think they have far less of the spirit of Christianity than they have the letter of it, of the actual words and terminology of its dogmas.

In point of fact, they have kept some of the words and terminology, words like Peace and Righteousness and Love; but they make these words stand for an atmosphere utterly alien to Christendom; they keep the letter and lose the spirit. And as it is with Christendom, so it is with Christmas. If men knew exactly what they meant by Christmas, and then started out to make new symbols, new ceremonies, or new jokes, it might be a very good thing. Something of the sort may yet happen, very probably, in that world of modern men that does know what it means by Christmas. But most of the modern modifications which were discussed in the magazine and elsewhere were quite the reverse of this.

They were really ways in which men may keep the name of Christmas, and a few faded badges of Christmas, while doing something totally different. But what is meant by men like the magazine writer is simply this: that a few sprigs of a particular vegetation called holly and mistletoe should be stuck up in large, over-heated, homeless American hotels, where people shall forget all about Christmas, be bored with the very thought of Christmas, blaspheme the supreme and sacred soul of Christmas with their sophistication and their satiety and their despair. They are too tired to feel the spirit; they are too tired to improve the symbolism; only they are also too tired even to alter the name.

That sort of thing is nothing so creative as reform, just as it is nothing so tenacious as tradition. It is simply drifting, like a halfmelted iceberg which floats into warmer waters, without knowing why it differs from its surroundings, why it is changing, or how much of it is left. None of us should desire to see the noble snow man of the English Christmas melt in the meaningless fashion of that iceberg. It would be better that the snow man should be destroyed like an idol by iconoclasts like the Puritans.

It were better that those who know why they like it should have to defend it against those who know why they dislike it. I have very little fear that in the last resort the latter would ever be the majority. But the former would fight much better if they did know why they liked it, even at the expense of returning to some of the superstitions of their fathers. Anyhow, I know why I like it; and in the case of the Christmas of cocktails and central heating, I know why I dislike it.

I know that the reality is not relativity or progress or the mere passage of the ages. I know Father Christmas when I see him, even when he is in plain clothes. And I am not deceived by Father Time dressed up in holly and mistletoe.

Priest, Catholic Children Injured in Christmas Parade Massacre

A Christmas parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin turned to tragedy last night as a crazed murderer ploughed through a crowd, killing 5 and injuring dozens and dozens more.

Left wing media created a bizarre conspiracy theory in the wake of the attack, in which it was falsely claimed that the suspect (who has a conviction for pimping children) was merely fleeing the scene of a crime and happened to drive through dozens of people.

The Catholic Community of Waukesha wrote on their Facebook page:

Thank you all for your prayers and offers of help. We have confirmed that several parishioners have been injured and are hospitalized.

Despite this horrific event, we will call on the Holy Spirit and come together as a community with Fr. Matthew and Fr. Chuck leading the Rosary tonight (8:30pm) on Facebook. Please join us to pray for those who were injured.

A prayer service is being planned for tomorrow night. We will continue to update you as we know more.

Monica Cardenas

Director of Stewardship and Communication

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee released a statement which said:

Our prayers are with the people who have been injured and killed during the tragic incident in Waukesha. Among the injured are one of our Catholic priests, as well as multiple parishioners and Waukesha Catholic school children.

Despite what many left wing outlets claimed, the attack was not accidental but completely intentional. He also stated that it was a ‘rumour’ that police were in pursuit of him.

A prayer vigil will take place for the victims later this evening on the parish’s Youtube page.

Catholic Community of Waukesha - YouTube

Catholic Students Hold Rosary Rally in Reparation for Planned Parenthood

In most parts of the Western world in 2021, the term ‘Catholic education’ is in many cases a misnomer.

Whether it be President Joe Biden, his poet Amanda Gorman or his supporter Lady Gaga, the notion that just having gone to a school with Catholic in the name makes one a theologically sound individual is an idea that continues to do harm.

While some are passive in their failure to transmit the faith, some are more active in allowing anti Catholic forces to influence their ‘Catholic’ students.

One such recent example occurred in Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California.

The Jesuit run university shockingly allowed for Planned Parenthood, the company that aborts millions of children, to raise money on campus for killing babies.

In response to this shocking dereliction of duty from Loyola’s management, a group of Catholic students have taken part in a Rosary Rally of Reparation for the babies that will be murdered with the monies raised on campus.

One of the organisers of the Rosary, Megan Glaudini, spoke to Catholic Arena:

Loyola Marymount University, a Jesuit Catholic institution, has a Planned Parenthood fundraiser happening on campus put on by a student run club. This has caused much chaos in the Catholic world because this goes against the Church’s teachings and, therefore, should be shut down if the university actually cared to uphold its Catholic values. However, the president has allowed it to still happen.

A couple of outraged students, led by myself, spent countless hours and days emailing and setting up meetings to try and find support. We ended up coming up with a few ideas to implement to try and save our Catholic identity, the first being our Rosary Prayer for Life service happening just outside where the Planned Parenthood fundraiser will be as it begins. I really am emphasizing the fact this is not a rowdy protest, but for the spreading of love, prayer, and the right to life.

This has nothing to do with politics, but everything to do with respecting the intrinsic value of all humans, from conception to natural death.

Although it might seem like a small gesture in response to a great evil, the power of prayer should never be underestimated. Neither should we ever underestimate the power of reminding people, namely the Loyola staff, of what the Catholic faith should look like.

Fauci, Abortion and Dogs

Anthony Fauci, the American medical figure, has become a symbol of the chaos of the past 19 months, for better or for worse, depending on one’s perspective.

Some Catholics have been vehemently opposed to his presence in the public sphere, regarding him as indicative of some megalomaniacal imperative to enslave the world. Some of those vague accusations are too broad to make any constructive sense, though new claims against research allegedly funded by him in China speaks volumes about the character of the man.

According to reports which have been gathering momentum since August of this year, Fauci funded completely depraved experiments which involved slowly torturing beagles to death, locking their heads inside boxes where flesh eating insects could eat them alive, with their vocal chords removed to stop them from barking. Yes, seriously.

This completely dystopian approach to ‘medicine’, comes as no surprise, Fauci supported President Joe Biden’s reversal of the Mexico City Policy, by which a new era of Abortion Imperialism was instituted by funding the deaths of unborn babies in other countries. He said:

“President Biden will be revoking the ‘Mexico City policy’ in the coming days as part of his broader commitment to protect women’s health and advance gender equality at home and around the world’’

The US abortion empire is of an even far more myopic origin than the animal torture experiments carried out on beagles.

A series of 13 undercover videos released in 2015 showed American abortion salespeople Planned Parenthood selling the body parts of unborn children for vast sums of money, while at lunch with journalists pretending to be unborn baby organ traffickers.

There was also the story of mass murderer abortionist Kermit Gosnell, who cut babies spines to let them die slowly and who killed several mothers.

Even getting away from abortion, there are the hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of abandoned embryos left in US laboratories after being left unused in IVF.

It is very easy for us to balk at the Chinese dog markets, their cruelty to other animals at so called ‘wet markets’, and their one child policy which led to millions of forced abortions, yet the USA and even the UK have similarly nightmarish results with no formal declaration of mandatory enforcement. In the UK for example, babies are incinerated to heat hospitals and 1 in 4 pregnancies end in abortion, something that pro abortion China could scarcely compete with at its worst.

Animals are helpless, but they are less helpless than unborn children. A society which allows the likes of Fauci a pass on supporting the barbaric extermination of millions of unborn children should not be shocked when equally horrific treatment towards animals follows after.

There are countless Hollywood films about Nazi experimentation, even some indirect ones such as bizarre horror film The Human Centipede. Yet there are none about the horrors of modern American science, be it abortion or torture of animals.

Those Jesuits who have educated and championed him should do the right thing and publicly renounce association with this dystopian debasement of so called medicine.



Pope Francis Begins Synod

In Rome today, Pope Francis began the process that will lead to the meeting of the Universal Synod there in 2023.

Quoting Fr. Yves Congar OP, the pope said:

We must not make another church, we must make a different church.

He stated that three problems which can arise are formalism, intellectualism and immobility.

cq5dam.web.800.800 (1).jpeg

Whatever your ideological slants, only the more fanatical factions of Modernism could suggest that the past half century has not been marked by such features as those, with church architecture, liturgical norms and artwork often taken the form of indecipherable gobbledygook designed to allow aloof theologians to impose their will despite alienating millions of laity in the process.

The three words that Francis identified as the key to the Synodal path were Communion, Participation, Mission.

With that in mind, those of a more traditional mind should not shirk the process which beings today, Diocesan Synodal Consultations will begin in earnest beginning this week and we must take at face value the idea that everyone’s voice will be heard. If we do not even attempt to speak up, we cannot complain when the results do not go our way.

The Modernist Clericalism which flexed its muscles in the 1960s and 1970s in demolishing churches and similar efforts of iconoclasm is not as well poised to repeat the trick in 2021 unless they are allowed to do so in conjunction with proxies in various ‘Catholic Spring’ type astro-turf lobby groups. Many of these have already gotten underway with their own Synodal Conferences but in many cases, their suggestions (particularly in Germany) have not been well received by the public, with Cardinal Walter Kasper even joining the chorus of those criticising the extreme nature of some proposals.

In a video this week, Fr. Brendan Kilcoyne has said ‘We should be looking at the parish system and asking ourselves if this is the most serviceable system for the modern church in the Western World?’ He makes good points that traditionalists should consider with regards to how much of this problem they have an answer for, with the various Latin Mass communities offering examples of groupings of people that are not generically confined to geography. The video is very much a worthwhile watch and expresses the sense of purpose and cautious optimism that we should meet this with.

Look up your local Diocesan Websites, find out where and when your Synodal events will begin to take place and if there are none at present, speak to someone you trust or a group that you support about staging one.

We are not going to promise it will turn out exactly as we might hope, but we can guarantee that sitting on the sidelines is not an option.

Pope Francis’s opening address:

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Thank you for being here at the opening of the Synod. You have come from many roads and Churches, each carrying questions and hopes in your hearts, and I am sure that the Spirit will guide us and give us the grace to go forward together, to listen to each other and to initiate discernment in our time, becoming in solidarity with the labors and desires of humanity. I reiterate that the Synod is not a parliament, that the Synod is not an investigation of opinions; the Synod is an ecclesial moment, and the protagonist of the Synod is the Holy Spirit. If there is no Spirit, there will be no Synod.

Let us live this Synod in the spirit of the prayer that Jesus addressed heartily to the Father for his own: "That they may all be one"(Jn 17:21). To this we are called: to unity, to communion, to the fraternity that is born from feeling embraced by the one love of God. All of us, without distinction, and we Pastors in particular, as St Cyprian wrote: "We must firmly maintain and claim this unity, especially we Bishops who preside over the Church, to give proof that even the episcopate itself is one and undivided"(De Ecclesiae Catholicae Unitate,5). In the one People of God, therefore, let us walk together, to experience a Church that receives and lives the gift of unity and opens herself to the voice of the Spirit.

The key words of the Synod are three: communion, participation, mission. Communion and mission are theological expressions that designate the mystery of the Church and of which it is good to remember. The Second Vatican Council clarified that communion expresses the very nature of the Church and, at the same time, affirmed that the Church has received "the mission of proclaiming and establishing in all peoples the kingdom of Christ and of God, and of this kingdom constitutes on earth the seed and the beginning"(Lumen Gentium, 5). Two words through which the Church contemplates and imitates the life of the Most Holy Trinity, the mystery of communion ad intra and the source of mission ad extra. After a time of doctrinal, theological and pastoral reflections that characterized the reception of Vatican II, St. Paul VI wanted to condense precisely in these two words – communion and mission – "the main lines, enunciated by the Council". Commemorating his openness, he affirmed that the general lines had been "communion, that is, cohesion and interior fullness, in grace, in truth, in collaboration [...] and mission, that is, apostolic commitment to the contemporary world"(Angelus,11 October 1970), which is not proselytism.

Closing the Synod of 1985, twenty years after the conclusion of the conciliar assembly, Saint John Paul II also wanted to reaffirm that the nature of the Church is koinonia:from it flows the mission of being a sign of the intimate union of the human family with God. And he added: "It is supremely fitting that ordinary and, if necessary, even extraordinary Synods be celebrated in the Church" which, in order to bear fruit, must be well prepared: "that is, it is necessary that in the local Churches work be done on their preparation with the participation of all"(Address at the conclusion of the Second Extraordinary Assembly of the Synod of Bishops,7 December 1985). So here is the third word, participation. Communion and mission risk remaining somewhat abstract terms if we do not cultivate an ecclesial practice that expresses the concreteness of synodality in every step of the journey and of work, promoting the real involvement of each and every one. I would like to say that celebrating a Synod is always beautiful and important, but it is truly fruitful if it becomes a living expression of being Church, of an action characterized by true participation.

And this is not for the sake of style, but of faith. Participation is a requirement of baptismal faith. As the Apostle Paul says, "we have all been baptized by one Spirit into one body"(1 Cor 12:13). The starting point, in the ecclesial body, is this and no other: Baptism. From it, our source of life, derives the equal dignity of the children of God, even in the difference of ministries and charisms. For this reason, everyone is called to participate in the life of the Church and in her mission. If there is no real participation of the whole People of God, the discourses on communion risk remaining pious intentions. On this aspect we have made progress, but there is still a certain difficulty and we are forced to record the discomfort and suffering of many pastoral workers, of the participatory bodies of dioceses and parishes, of women who are often still on the margins. To participate everyone: it is an indispensable ecclesial commitment! All baptized, this is the identity card: Baptism.

The Synod, precisely while it offers us a great opportunity for a pastoral conversion in a missionary and also ecumenical key, is not exempt from some risks. I will mention three. The first is that of formalism. You can reduce a Synod to an extraordinary event, but a façade, just as if you were looking at a beautiful façade of a church without ever set foot in it. Instead, the Synod is a path of effective spiritual discernment, which we do not undertake to give a beautiful image of ourselves, but to better collaborate in God's work in history. Therefore, if we speak of a synodal Church we cannot be satisfied with the form, but we also need substance, tools and structures that favor dialogue and interaction in the People of God, especially between priests and laity. Why do I emphasize this? Because sometimes there is some elitism in the priestly order that makes it detach from the laity; and the priest eventually becomes the "master of the shack" and not the pastor of a whole Church that is moving forward. This requires transforming certain top-down, distorted and partial visions of the Church, the priestly ministry, the role of the laity, ecclesial responsibilities, government roles, and so on.

A second risk is that of intellectualism – abstraction, reality goes there and we with our reflections go elsewhere – to make the Synod a kind of study group, with cultured but abstract interventions on the problems of the Church and on the evils of the world; a sort of "talking to us", where we proceed in a superficial and worldly way, ending up falling back into the usual sterile ideological and party classifications and detaching ourselves from the reality of the holy People of God, from the concrete life of the communities scattered around the world.

Finally, there may be the temptation ofimmobility:since "it has always been done this way" (Ap. Evangelii Gaudium,33) – this word is a poison in the life of the Church, "it has always been done this way" – it is better not to change. Those who move in this horizon, even without realizing it, fall into the error of not taking seriously the time we inhabit. The risk is that in the end old solutions will be adopted for new problems: a patch of raw cloth, which in the end creates a worse tear (cf. Mt 9:16). For this reason it is important that the Synod be truly such, a process in progress; involve, in different phases and from below, the local Churches, in a passionate and incarnate work, which imprints a style of communion and participation marked by the mission.

Let us therefore live this occasion of encounter, listening and reflection as a time of grace,brothers and sisters, a time of grace that, in the joy of the Gospel, allows us to seize at least three opportunities. The first is to set out not occasionally but structurally towards a synodal Church:an open place, where everyone feels at home and can participate. The Synod then offers us the opportunity to become the Church of listening:to take a break from our rhythms, to stop our pastoral anxieties to stop and listen. Listen to the Spirit in adoration and prayer. How much we miss the prayer of adoration today! Many have lost not only the habit, but also the notion of what it means to worship. Listen to our brothers and sisters on the hopes and crises of faith in the different areas of the world, on the urgent needs for the renewal of pastoral life, on the signs that come from local realities. Finally, we have the opportunity to become a Church of closeness. Let us always return to God's style: God's style is closeness, compassion and tenderness. God has always worked like this. If we do not come to this Church of closeness with attitudes of compassion and tenderness, we will not be the Church of the Lord. And this not only in words, but with presence, so that greater bonds of friendship with society and the world may be established: a Church that does not separate itself from life, but takes charge of the fragility and poverty of our time, healing wounds and healing broken hearts with the balm of God. Let us not forget God's style that must help us: closeness, compassion and tenderness.

Dear brothers and sisters, may this Synod once inhabited by the Spirit! Because we need the Spirit, the ever new breath of God, who frees us from all closure, revives what is dead, loosens the chains, spreads joy. The Holy Spirit is the One who guides us where God wants and not where our personal ideas and tastes would take us. Father Congar, of holy memory, recalled: "We must not makeanother Church,we must make a different Church"(Vera e falsa riforma nella Chiesa,Milan 1994, 193). And that's the challenge. For a "different Church", open to the newness that God wants to suggest to her, let us invoke the Spirit with greater strength and frequency and humbly listen to him, walking together, as he, creator of communion and mission, desires, that is, with docility and courage.

Come, Holy Spirit. You who arouse new languages and put words of life on your lips, preserve us from becoming a museum Church, beautiful but mute, with so much past and little future. Come among us, because in the synodal experience we do not allow ourselves to be overwhelmed by disenchantment, we do not water down prophecy, we do not end up reducing everything to sterile discussions. Come, Holy Spirit of love, open our hearts to listening. Come, Spirit of holiness, renew the holy faithful People of God. Come, Creator Spirit, make the face of the earth new. Amen.