To fight a war, I need good weapons, and
My enemy I need to understand.
Who can imagine all Amazonia’s trees
Clapping their hands? Just watch God do it, with ease!
The Society is following the world.
Its fatal course is ever more unfurled.
Who gave to Rome the stick with which to beat us?
How they must laugh at how they can then treat us!
”We have effaced Lefebvre. We die content.”
Such leaders are not Heaven-, but Hell-bent!
In God’s Church, first and foremost doctrine counts.
Compromise there to treachery amounts.
”The help of God is closer than the door” –
For any soul at all, however poor.
All devils tell me, God is absent, weak.
I need to think. The truth’s not far to seek.
With Vatican II, the Devil mastered Rome.
What Catholic can think, it still is home?
Moderns will often get the darkness right,
But if they miss Christ, still they have no light.
To a doubting French journalist the author of “Eleison Comments” expresses confidence that the imminent Motu Proprio will do much good.
Indeed, it both declares that the Tridentine Mass was never banned, and permits Latin rite priests to use it, whenever and wherever.
By overloading our eyes and ears, said Kafka, the cinema overwhelms our minds. Minds being overwhelmed means that lies triumph.
In his outstanding Encyclical of 100 years ago, Pius X nailed the deadly error of modern times: minds’ independence from their object.
Despite many Catholics’ reservations as to the content and motivation of the Motu Proprio, one may still believe it will do good.