Vocations – Wherefrom?
Today’s “universities” and job market both push young men towards the Sciences. But future priests need the Humanities. We have a problem.
Today’s “universities” and job market both push young men towards the Sciences. But future priests need the Humanities. We have a problem.
To disregard the doctrinal gulf between Rome’s religion of man and the SSPX’s religion of God would be to disregard God himself.
Near this city is an SSPX school where the children learn to solve all the city’s problems by worshipping God, not Mammon.
A tour of the suburbs of a once great American city reveals a people living in fantasyland. But reality is re-asserting itself.
If the Rome-SSPX discussions go nowhere doctrinally, Rome might try to circumvent them by a political deal dangerous for the Faith.
Bishop de Galarreta was not maintaining (156) that the irreconcilable doctrines of Rome and the SSPX can be reconciled. They cannot.
A former University Professor recommends Catholics to avoid today’s “universities,” lacking all truth and authority, except to get a job.
Six errors sum up the doctrine of a ringleader of Vatican II, Fr. Chenu. In brief, man in the place of God.
Religionless religion makes the painter Van Gogh popular with the crowds today, but to be happy himself he needed the true religion.
Americans today have “little regard for truth, little access to it and little ability to recognize it,” says an American. Example, 9/11.
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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