The conciliar revolutionaries are very adept at undermining their own teaching, although none of them has done so with the particular boldness of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, who has, even if ever so subtly, began to undermine a “response” by the misnamed “Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith” to dubium about pastoral “blessings” upon sodomites who have entered into “civil unions” that he himself had approved on Monday, February 22, 2021, the Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter in Antioch. Bergoglio began to undermine his “doctrinal” congregation’s response to the dubium during his Angelus address on Sunday, March 21, 2021, which was Passion Sunday and the Commemoration of Saint Benedict in the Catholic Church but was the “Fifth Sunday of Lent” in his counterfeit church of conciliarism, by saying the following as a way to undermine his congregation’s refusal to permit the “blessing” of “civil unions” that he had approved:
It means sowing seeds of love, not with fleeting words but through concrete, simple and courageous examples, not with theoretical condemnations, but with gestures of love. Then the Lord, with his grace, makes us bear fruit, even when the soil is dry due to misunderstandings, difficulty or persecution, or claims of legalism or clerical moralism. This is barren soil. (Angelus Address, March 21, 2021.)
This commentary deals with Bergoglio’s undermining of the conciliar Congregation for the Deformation, Destruction, and Deconstruction of the Holy Faith near the end of its text as the first two-thirds of the commentary explain how conciliar documents on the Sixth and Ninth Commandments are based in false premises that wind up serving as instruments to further the conciliar agenda against the Holy Faith. Being bereft of ability to understand their own falsehoods, the conciliar revolutionaries attempt to fight moral evils, no matter how tepidly, without addressing the fact their proliferation in the direct result of the anti-Incarnational civil state of Modernity with which they long ago made their “official reconciliation.”
Now, a bit of speculation on an entirely different matter.
Tomorrow, Thursday, March 25, 2021, is the Feast of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Commemoration of Thursday in Passion Week. It is also the thirtieth anniversary of the death of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, the founder of the Society of Saint Pius X, whose false Gallicanist ecclesiology remains so many even today three decades the basis of the “resist while recognize” movement.
Now, my speculation on the following is purely that as the thought about it occurred to me while writing the text of this long commentary: Might Jorge Mario Bergoglio, who loves to “make a mess of things,” seek to deflect criticism for his banning all private “Masses” in the Basilica of Saint Peter and the consigning of stagings/offerings of the modernized version of the Immemorial Mass of Tradition in the basilica’s crypt by posthumously lifting the ban of excommunication that was imposed upon him, Lefebvre, on July 2, 1988, in Ecclesia Dei Ad Afflicta? This speculation may be without any merit. However, it would be in character for Bergoglio to try to woo the bishops and priests of the Society of Saint Pius X by such a gesture of “mercy” to further neutralize what has long been the “controlled opposition” of what passes for the much of the traditional movement.
Finally, we have been informed by a person who attends a chapel administered by a priest of the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen, that the fifty-one year-old police officer, Eric Talley, who bravely responded to the call of duty when Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa opened fire upon shoppers at a grocery store in Boulder, Colorado, on Monday, March 22, 2021, the Feast of Saint Isidore the Farmer here in the United States and the Commemoration of Monday Passion Week, and was mortally wounded by the gunfire was a member of a Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen parish in Colorado.
Press reports state that Officer Talley, who was married and was the father of seven children, had given up a six-figure position to become a police officer after a friend of his was killed in automobile accident caused by a driver who was driving under the influence of alcohol or a controlled substance. His bravery and valor are admirable.
Our prayers, therefore, should be with the Talley family at this time as we pray for the repose of his immortal soul. A commentary on this tragedy—and the recent killings by Robert Aaron Long in Atlanta, Georgia, will follow by Palm Sunday along with a republished reflection on Holy Week.
Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine up him.
May his soul and all the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.
Our Lady of Sorrows, pray for us.
Saint Gabriel the Archangel, pray for us.