Five Hundred
”Comments” are lightweight, not a heavy sword –
“Eleison” means “Have mercy” – please, O Lord!
”Comments” are lightweight, not a heavy sword –
“Eleison” means “Have mercy” – please, O Lord!
The world today could make a saint despair –
But half a saint knows how to turn to prayer.
What does the Lord God want of me and you?
To do what we can, not what we cannot do.
The modern world was hatching long ago,
We learned, as three of Dickens’ novels show.
The parallels between the official Church being seduced at Vatican II and the SSPX being seduced by the Newchurch, are striking.
The 20th century’s most outstanding poet in English, T.S.Eliot, sets an example of not pretending that modernity is angelic.
With God’s grace, let us be neither schismatizing “sedevacantists,” nor – worse – like today’s Roman churchmen, who are sick in the head.
Proofs pile up that 9/11 was an inside job. Catholics, wake up! The official lies threaten ultimately to undermine your Faith!
Benedict XVI tries to interpret Vatican II and Tradition so as to make them compatible, but God’s Truth cannot be bent.
The God-given nature of young adults is looking for one life-partner. Liberty is looking for any number of “partners.” Liberty undoes nature.
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.
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