- Nike SF Air Force 1 Mid Ivory Olive917753-101 , IetpShops , Release Reminder: Nike Kobe VIII (8) 'Black History Month'
- Nike Air Max 1 Ultra Moire University Red 1 Ultra Moire University Red 2 Terra Blush AJ6599 - Nike Air Max 1 Ultra Moire University Red - 201 Release Date , IetpShops
- Air Jordan 4 Retro Off - CV9388 - White Sail - 100 - Jordan Brand quietly slipped in a new rendition of the low-top
- leg jeans Schwarz Dsquared2 - detail straight - Nº21 carabiner - VbjdevelopmentsShops Sweden - Favourites Yours Curve Navy London Pocket Maxi Dress Inactive
- concept lab air jordan 11 oklahoma sooners pe blake griffin - IetpShops , 002 2024 487471 - 160 - Womens Jordan MA2 Opti Yellow Marathon Running Shoes Sneakers CW5992
- Off White Converse Chuck Taylor Black White
- air jordan 1 low unc university blue white AO9944 441 release date
- air jordan 1 retro high og university blue 555088 134
- jordan 1 retro high og university blue ps aq2664 134
- Nike Dunk High Aluminum DD1869 107 Release Date 4
- Home
- Articles Archive, 2006-2016
- Golden Oldies
- 2016-2024 Articles Archive
- About This Site
- As Relevant Now as It Was One Hundred Six Years Ago: Our Lady's Fatima Message
- Donations (August 17, 2024)
- Now Available for Purchase: Paperback Edition of G.I.R.M. Warfare: The Conciliar Church's Unremitting Warfare Against Catholic Faith and Worship
- Ordering Dr. Droleskey's Books
On the Third Day of Christmas: The Feast of Saint John the Beloved Evangelist
The Third Day in the Octave of Christmas brings us to the Feast of Saint John the Evangelist (or Beloved), the Apostle who was most dearly loved by Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ because he most closely resembled Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's own innocence and purity. That is, Saint John was himself a virgin throughout his entire life. It was the purity of his life that caused him to remain faithful to His Divine Master during the darkest hours of the latter's Passion and Death. Saint John was the only bishop who kept Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ company at the foot of the Holy Cross. Saint John's unalloyed virginal love for Love Incarnate, Love Crucified and Resurrected, won for him the honor of caring for the Blessed Virgin Mary from the moment she was given him by her Divine Son to be his mother as He spoke to both of them atop the Tree of Life that is His Holy Cross.
The purity and innocence of Saint John the Beloved's life were responsible for the beauty and profundity of the writing that he undertook under the direct inspiration of the Holy Ghost. Saint John's Gospel is the most theological of the four Gospels, including within its sacred texts the beautiful description of how the Word was made flesh, and dwelt amongst us.
Indeed, Saint John's exquisite description of the Word's Incarnation as Man became so important in the life of the Church over the centuries that Pope Saint Pius V mandated its reading after Mass on most days of the year in his Missale Romanum of 1570 to serve as an antidote to the anti-Incarnational errors of Modernity in general and as an antidote to the anti-Incarnational attacks on the nature of Mass by various and sundry Protestant Revolutionaries.
It is of course quite telling that the practice instituted by Pope Saint Pius V, which had begun in the Twelfth Century as priests recited "The Last Gospel" to themselves as they concluded Mass and walked back to their sacristies, was suppressed by the false "pontiff" Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini/Paul VI in the Ordo Missae of 1965. There is a direct cause and effect between the suppression of the reading of the Last Gospel after Holy Mass in both the "transitional Mass" of 1965 and the Protestant and Judeo-Masonic Novus Ordo liturgical abomination of 1969 and the loss of belief in the sacrificial nature of the Mass and in the Real Presence of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in the Most Blessed Sacrament in Catholics attached to the structures of the counterfeit church of conciliarism.
Dom Prosper Gueranger, O.S.B., provided a commentary on the human author of the Fourth Gospel, Saint John the Evangelist, the Disciple whom Our Lord loved:
Nearest to Jesus’ Crib, after Stephen, stands John, the Apostle and Evangelist. It was only right, that the first place should be assigned to him, who so loved his God, that he shed his blood in his service; for, as this God himself declares, greater love than this hath no man, that he lay down his life for his friends [1 John, 15:13] and Martyrdom has ever been counted, by the Church, as the greatest act of love, and as having, consequently, the power of remitting sins, like a second Baptism. But, next to the sacrifice of Blood, the noblest, the bravest, and which most wins the heart of Him who is the Spouse of souls, is the sacrifice of Virginity. Now, just as St. Stephen is looked upon as the type of Martyrs, St. John is honoured as the Prince of Virgins. Martyrdom won for Stephen the Crown and palm; Virginity merited for John most singular prerogatives, which, while they show how dear to God is holy Chastity, put this Disciple among those, who, by their dignity and influence, are above the rest of men.
St. John was of the family of David, as was our Blessed Lady. He was, consequently, a relation of Jesus. This same honour belonged to St. James the Greater, his Brother; as also to St. James the Less, and St Jude, both Sons of Alpheus. When our Saint was in the prime of his youth, he left, not only his boat and nets, not only has lather Zebedee, but even his betrothed, when everything was prepared for the marriage. He followed Jesus, and never once looked back. Hence, the special love which our Lord bore him. Others were Disciples or Apostles, John was the Friend, of Jesus. The cause of this our Lord’s partiality, was, as the Church tells us in the Liturgy, that John had offered his Virginity to the Man-God. Let us, on this his Feast, enumerate the graces and privileges that came to St. John from his being The Disciple whom Jesus loved.
Chastity of soul and body brings him who possesses it into a sacred nearness and intimacy with God. Hence it was, that at the Last Supper – that Supper, which was to be renewed on our Altars, to the end of the world, in order to cure our spiritual infirmities, and give life to our souls – John was placed near to Jesus, nay, was permitted, as the tenderly loved Disciple, to lean his head upon the Breast of the Man-God. Then it was, that he was filled, and from their very Fountain, with Light and Love: it was both a recompense and a favour, and became the source of two signal graces, which make St. John an object of special reverence to the whole Church.
Divine wisdom wishing to make known to the world the Mystery of the Word, and commit to Scripture those profound secrets, ‘which, so far, no pen of mortal had been permitted to write – the task was put upon John. Peter had been crucified, Paul had been beheaded, and the rest of the Apostles had laid down their lives in testimony of the Truths they had been sent to preach to the world; John was the only one left in the Church. Heresy had already begun its blasphemies against the Apostolic Teach ings; it refused to admit the Incarnate Word as the Son of God, Consubstantial to the Father. John was asked by the Churches to speak, and he did so in language heavenly above measure. His Divine Master had reserved to this his Virgin-Disciple the honour of writing those sublime Mysteries, which the other Apostles had been commissioned only to teach – THE WORD WAS GOD, and this WORD WAS MADE FLESH for the salvation of mankind. Thus did our Evangelist soar, like the Eagle, up to the Divine Sun, and gaze upon Him with undazzled eye, because his heart and senses were pure, and there fore fitted for such vision of the uncreated Light. If Moses, after having conversed with God in the cloud, came from the divine interview with rays of miraculous light encircling his head: – how radiant must have been the face of St. John, which had rested on the very Heart of Jesus, in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge! [Col. 2:3] how sublime his writings! how divine his teaching! Hence, the symbol of the Eagle, shown to the Prophet Ezechiel, [Ezechiel 1:10, 10:14] and to St. John himself in his Revelations, [Apoc. 4:7] has been assigned to him by the Church: and to this title of The Eagle has been added, by universal tradition, the other beautiful name of Theologian, This was the first recompense given by Jesus to his Beloved John a profound penetration into divine Mysteries. The second was the imparting to him a most ardent charity, which was equally a grace consequent upon his angelic purity, for purity unburdens the soul from grovelling egotistic affections, and raises it to a chaste and generous love. John had treasured up in his heart the Discourses of his Master: he made them known to the Church, and especially that divine one of the Last Supper, wherein Jesus had poured forth his whole Soul to his own, whom he had always tenderly loved, but most so at the end [John, 13:1]. He wrote his Epistles, and Charity is his subject: God is Charity – he that loveth not, knoweth not God – perfect Charity casteth out fear – and so on throughout, always on Love. During the rest of his fife, even when so enfeebled by old age as not to be able to walk, he was for ever insisting upon all men loving each other, after the example of God, who had loved them and so loved them! Thus, he that had announced more clearly than the rest of the Apostles the divinity of the Incarnate Word, was by excellence the Apostle of that divine Charity, which Jesus came to enkindle upon the earth.
But, our Lord had a further gift to bestow, and it was sweetly appropriate to the Virgin-Disciple. When dying on his cross, Jesus left Mary upon this earth. Joseph had been dead now some years. Who, then, shall watch over his Mother? who is there worthy of the charge? Will Jesus send his Angels to protect and console her? – for, surely, what man could ever merit to be to her as a second Joseph? Looking down, he sees the Virgin-Disciple standing at the foot of the Cross: we know the rest, John is to be Mary’s Son – Mary is to be John’s Mother. Oh! wonderful Chastity, that wins from Jesus such an inheritance as this! Peter, says St. Peter Damian, shall have left to him the Church, the Mother of men; but John, shall receive Mary, the Mother of God, whom he will love as his own dearest Treasure, and to whom he will stand in Jesus’ stead; whilst Mary will tenderly love John, her Jesus’ Friend, as her Son.
Can we be surprised after this, that St John is looked upon by the Church as one of her greatest glories? He is a Relative of Jesus in the flesh; he is an Apostle, a Virgin, the Friend of the Divine Spouse, the Eagle, the Theologian, the Son of Mary; he is an Evangelist, by the history he has given of the Life of his Divine Master and Friend; he is a Sacred Writer, by the three Epistles he wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost; he is a Prophet, by his mysterious Apocalypse, wherein are treasured the secrets of time and eternity. But, is he a Martyr? Yes, for if he did not complete his sacrifice, he drank the Chalice of Jesus [Matt. 20:22], when, after being cruelly scourged, he was thrown into a caldron of boiling oil, before the Latin Gate, at Rome. He was, therefore, a Martyr in desire and intention, though not in fact. If our Lord, wishing to prolong a life so dear to the Church, as well as to show how he loves and honours Virginity, – miraculously stayed the effects of the frightful punishment, St John had, on his part, unreservedly accepted Martyrdom.
Such is the companion of Stephen at the Crib, wherein lies our Infant Jesus. If the Protomartyr dazzles us with the robes he wears of the bright scarlet of his own blood – is not the virginal whiteness of John’s vestment fairer than the untrod snow? The spotless beauty of the Lilies of Mary’s adopted Son, and the bright vermilion of Stephen’s Roses – what is there more lovely than their union? Glory, then, be to our New-Born King, whose court is tapestried with such heaven-made colours as these! Yes, Bethlehem’s Stable is a very heaven on earth, and we have seen its transformation. First, we saw Mary and Joseph alone there – they were adoring Jesus in his Crib; then, immediately, there descended a heavenly host of Angels singing the wonderful Hymn; the Shepherds soon followed, the humble simple-hearted Shepherds; after these, entered Stephen the Crowned, and John the Beloved Disciple; and, even before there enters the pageant of the devout Magi, we shall have others coming in, and there will be, each day, grander glory in the Cave, and gladder joy in our hearts. Oh! this Birth of our Jesus! Humble as it seems, yet, how divine! What King or Emperor ever received, in his gilded cradle, honours like these shown to the Babe of Bethlehem? Let us unite our homage with that given him by these the favoured inmates of his court. Yesterday, the sight of the Palm in Stephen’s hand animated us, and we offered to our Jesus the promise of a stronger Faith: to-day, the Wreath, that decks the brow of the Beloved Disciple, breathes upon the Church the heavenly fragrance of Virginity – an intenser love of Purity must be our resolution, and our tribute to the Lamb. (Dom Prosper Gueraner, O.S.B., The Liturgical Year.)
It is the Gospel according to the virginal apostle that contains the record of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's first public miracle, the transformation of the water into wine at the wedding feast in Cana at the behest of the fairest flower of our race, the Blesssed Virgin Man, to whom Our Lord can refuse nothing. This miracle was, of course, a foreshadowing of the Eucharist. There is to be found four chapters thereafter the account of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's Eucharistic Discourse, making it abundantly clear that one must eat of the Flesh of the Son and of Man and drink of His Blood to have life in him unto eternity. The Gospel of the Beloved Apostle records Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's institution of the Sacrament of Penance ("Receive ye the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained") and provides two important proofs of Sacred Tradition of being one of the two sources of Divine Revelation:
Many other signs also did Jesus in the sight of his disciples, which are not written in this book. But these are written, that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God: and that believing, you may life in his name. (John: 20: 30-31)
But there are also many other things which Jesus did; which if they were written every one, the world itself, I think, would not be able to contain the books that should be written. (John 21: 25)
It is in Saint John's Gospel that we find Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's description of Himself as the Good Shepherd and that He is the true Vine Who means to graft us into Him as His branches. Pontius Pilate, speaking for the relativists and the pragmatists of all time, is recorded in Saint John's Gospel as asking most dismissively "What is truth?," reminding us that we who profess Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to be the Way, the Truth, and the Life must give voice to His truth at all times, yes, even in front of kings and potentates and the powerful men and women who control access to the nation's airwaves. And it is in Saint John's Gospel that we find Saint Peter's triple profession of love for Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, undoing his triple denial of Him during His Passion, and a confirmation of His headship of the Apostolic College (which confirmation includes Our Blessed Lord and Sav
iour Jesus Christ's injunction to Saint Peter to feed His lambs, who need to be fed on the tongue.) Even before that particular scene, recorded in Chapter 21 of Saint John's Gospel, the Beloved Apostle and Evangelist indicates his own deference to the headship of Saint Peter when recounting their visit to the empty tomb on Easter Sunday:
And on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalen cometh early, when it was yet dark, unto the sepulchre; and she saw the stone taken away from the sepulchre.
She ran, therefore, and cometh to Simon Peter, and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and saith to them: They have taken away the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where they have laid him.
Peter therefore went out, and that other disciple, and they came to the sepulchre. And they both ran together, and that other disciple did outrun Peter, and came first to the sepulchre. And when he stooped down, he saw the linen cloths lying; but yet he went not in.
Then cometh Simon Peter, following him, and went into the sepulchre, and saw the linen cloths lying. And the napkin that had been about his head, not lying with the linen cloths, but apart, wrapped into one place.
Then that other disciple also went in, who came first to the sepulchre: and he saw, and believed. (John 20: 1-8)
Saint John the Beloved, being much younger than Saint Peter, had outrun the first pope to the empty tomb. Out of respect for the absolute Primacy of the Fisherman, however, Saint John peered into the tomb but did not enter it until after the Supreme Pontiff had arrived and entered it himself, finding that the head piece of Church's Divine Bridegroom, Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and Saviour Jesus Christ, had been carefully wrapped up and placed aside. None of the Apostles was loved more by Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ than Saint John. He, though, deferred to the Apostle who had denied Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ three times, who was not present with him and Our Lady at the foot of the Divine Master's Holy Cross, teaching us humility and respect for the Petrine Office.
Saint John the Beloved's three Epistles teach us much about the truths that had been entrusted solely to the Catholic Church, of which he was one of the first twelve bishops. It is not any kind of pan-Christianity, founded in an acceptance of religious indifferentism, that pleases God. It is fidelity to the Commandments He has taught us through His true Church. The precepts of the Divine positive law, which consist of the Ten Commandments and all those things taught by Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, are solely within the province of the Catholic Church to safeguard and infallibly explicate. This is what Saint John meant when he wrote:
And by this we know that we have known him, if we keep his commandments. He who saith that he knoweth him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But he that keepeth his word, in him in very deed the charity of God is perfected; and by this we know that we are in Him.
He that saith he abideth in him, ought himself also to walk, even as he walked. (1 John 2: 2-6)
The love of God and of neighbor of which Saint John wrote much consists in obeying God as He has revealed Himself through His true Church, seeking the ultimate good of all men, that is, the salvation of their immortal souls as members of the Catholic Church. To love our fellow men we must will their good, we must help them to see the world clearly as Catholics and to cooperate with the graces won for us by the shedding of every single drop of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's Most Precious Blood on the wood of the Holy Cross. We must perform the Spiritual and Corporal Works of Mercy mindful of how each of them relates to our Last End, giving all to the Immaculate Heat of Mary, in whose maternal bosom Saint John was privileged to abide from Good Friday to the moment of her bodily Assumption into Heaven.
Saint John, the virginal Apostle, was unspotted by the world. Saint John wrote in such eloquent terms of the Incarnation of Word as Man. He wrote of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's telling Nicodemus that a born cannot be born again except by water and the Holy Ghost. He recorded Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's washing of the feet of the Apostles at the Last Supper, symbolic of the dirt we gather on ourselves by means of surrendering to the elements of the world, the flesh, and the devil. It is thus quite appropriate that he, who recounted Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ's words in the Last Discourse of how the world would hate His disciples as much as it hated Him, would write the following words under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost in his first Epistle:
Love not the world, nor the things which are in the world. If any man love the world, the charity of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, is the concupiscence of the flesh, and the concupiscence of the eyes, and the pride of life, which is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth away, and the concupiscence thereof; but he that doth the will of God, abideth for ever. (1 John 2:15-17)
Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ came into the world, as Saint John wrote in Chapter 1 of his Gospel, and His own received Him not. Men preferred the darkness of this passing world rather than to embrace the Light of the World Himself. Men who persist in a love of the things of this world--and who gather up to themselves the pleasures of this life so as to make themselves appear to be more important or successful than others--make room in their own lives and the larger life of the world they love so much for the Antichrist that he wrote about in his first Epistle and in his Book of the Apocalypse.
Archbishop Jacobus de Voragine's The Golden Legend contains a description of Saint John the Beloved's contempt for the riches of this world:
He then went on to speak against riches, enumerating six reasons that should deter us from an inordinate desire for wealth. The first is in Scripture, and he told the story of the gluttonous rich man, whom God rejected, and the poor man Lazarus, whom God rewarded. The second comes from nature itself: man is born naked and without wealth, and he dies without wealth. The third is seen in creation: just as the sun, the moon, and the stars, the rains and the air, are common to all and their benefits shared by all, so among men everything should be held in common. The next reason is fortune itself. The rich man is the slave of his money; he does not possess it, it possesses him; and he is the slave of the devil, because the Gospel says that the lover of money is a slave of mammon. Fifth comes care and worry: the rich worry day and night about how to get more and how to keep what they have. Sixth and last, he showed that wealth involves the risk of loss. In the acquisition of riches there lies a twofold evil: it leads to swollen pride in this present life and to eternal damnation in the next; and for those doomed to damnation there is a double loss--of divine grace at present and of eternal glory in the future. (Archbishop Jacobus de Voragine, The Golden Legend.)
We must familiarize ourselves with the completely Catholic nature of Saint John's writing so as to be armed when a Protestant friend or neighbor or relative, steeped in the errors of the evils of Calvinist, capitalist material acquisition, obviously, engages in his effort to quote various passages from New Testament without understanding the very books enumerated as the Word of God therein were accepted as such by the Catholic Church. Thus, for example, anyone who states that it is impossible for one to lose his salvation after he has made his "profession of faith" in the Lord Jesus on his lips and in his heart ought to be referred to Chapter 5 of Saint John's first epistle, wherein the Beloved Apostle and Evangelist speaks quite directly about the fate of a soul that dies in a state of Mortal Sin, that is, which kills the life of sanctifying grace from the soul and excludes one from entrance into Heaven until it is forgiven in the Sacrament of Penance by an alter Christus acting in persona Christi:
There is a sin unto death for that I say not that any man ask. All iniquity is sin. And there is an sin unto death. (1 John 5: 16-17)
That is, it is possible for a baptized Catholic to lose his salvation if he persists until his dying breath in a state of final impertinence. Protestants, committing the sin of Presumption, believe that it is almost impossible for a follower of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to be lost after he has made his "profession of faith." This is delusional. Saint John the Beloved contradicted this thoroughly, as does Saint Paul when he warned us to work out our salvation in "fear and in trembling" (Philippians 2: 12).
Bishop Richard Challoner elaborated on the fact that the Beloved Apostle most likely included the sin of apostasy as the sort of sin that brings death to the soul:
[16] A sin unto death: Some understand this of final impenitence, or of dying in mortal sin; which is the only sin that never can be remitted. But, it is probable, he may also comprise under this name, the sin of apostasy from the faith, and some other such heinous sins as are seldom and hardly remitted: and therefore he gives little encouragement, to such as pray for these sinners, to expect what they ask.
Obviously, this applies to the apostates within the counterfeit church of conciliarism.
The necessity of adhering to the teaching that Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ has entrusted exclusively to the Catholic Church and fleeing from familiarity with those who reject Catholic teaching is stressed by Saint John in both his second epistle:
Whosoever revolteth, and continueth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that continueth in the doctrine, the same hath both the Father and the Son. If any man come to you, and bring not this doctrine, receive him not into the house nor say to him, God speed you. For he that saith unto him, God speed you, communicateth with his wicked works. (2 John 1: 9-11)
We must adhere to what the Church herself has handed down to us from the Apostles over the centuries under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost without any novelties or errors or deviations whatsoever. It is in light of the Church's Fathers and Doctors, for example, that we must read and understand the profundity contained within Saint John the Beloved's The Book of the Apocalypse, written while he was exiled on the island of Patmos following the unsuccessful attempt to boil him alive at the Latin Gate in Rome during the reign of Emperor Domitian (81-96 A.D.). The Book of the Apocalypse cannot be understood correctly by Protestant "prophets" (whose predictions must never occupy one scintilla of our time or energy) or by their end-times brethren among the Catholic laity, some of whom have to correct their bold predictions when events prove them to be as wrong as their fellow practitioners of soothsaying in the sects of the Protestant Revolution. The Book of the Apocalypse can be understood only in light of the teaching of the Catholic Church.
Saint John himself warned that no man could add to or take away from anything he had written in the Book of the Apocalypse:
For I testify to every one that heareth the word of the prophecy of this book: If any man shall add to these things. God shall add unto him the plagues written in this book. And if any man shall take away from the words of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from these things that are written in this book. (Apoc. 22:18-19)
The death of Saint John the Beloved of old age in Ephesus during the first quarter of the Second Century A.D. closed the Era of Revelation that had begun with the writing of the Old Testament. No new "revelation" has been added since that time. The Church, guided by the Third Person of the Most Blessed Trinity, God the Holy Ghost, has had to reflect on what had been revealed so as to refute errors and elucidate certain points that she deemed necessary to discuss at various times. However, not even the proclamation of dogmas--such as the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary by Pope Pius IX in 1854, Papal Infallibility by the [First Vatican] Council in 1870, and the Assumption of Our Lady body and soul in to Heaven by Pope Pius XII in 1950--have "added" anything new to the era that closed with the death of the last Apostle, the Beloved of Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and Saviour Jesus Christ, the son of Zebedee, John the Evangelist. Each of those dogmas were contained in the Deposit of Faith. They had only to be more fully explicated.
There was, as noted just above, an attempt to boil Saint John alive in oil. It was not God's will for Saint John, who had the desire and the willingness to be martyred, to die a death of martyrdom. He was a martyr of love, love unalloyed for Love Incarnate, Love Crucified and Resurrected. One of the proofs of the extent to which Saint John was beloved by the King of Love Himself was that He entrusted the care of His own Most Blessed Mother to him. Saint John looked after Our Lady with the devotion of a true son. She looked after him as a true son.
None other than the great Saint Jerome, who had the privilege of laying his own head in the Crib where Our Lady had placed the Baby Jesus after His Miraculous Birth on Christmas Day, has provided us with a marvelous account of Saint John the Beloved's apostolic work and evangelical zeal for truth:
The Apostle John whom Jesus loved was a son of Zebedee, and brother of the Apostle James, who was beheaded by Herod soon after our Lord suffered. He was the last of the Evangelists to write his Gospel, which he published at the request of the Bishops of Asia, against Cerinthus and other heretics, and particularly against the then spreading doctrine of the Ebionites, who asserted that Christ had had no existence before Mary. It was therefore needful for the Evangelist to declare His Eternal and Divine Generation.
In the fourteenth year after Nero, Domitian stirred up the second persecution, and John was exiled to the island of Patmos, where he wrote his Apocalypse, which hath been explained by Justin the Martyr and Irenaeus. When Domitian was killed, the Senate annulled all his acts, on account of his savage cruelty, and the Apostle returned to Ephesus, during the reign of Nerva. He remained at Ephesus until the time of Trajan, and founded and governed all the Churches of Asia. There, in an extreme old age, he died, in the sixty-eighth year after the Lord's passion, and was buried near the city.
The Blessed Evangelist John lived at Ephesus down to an extreme old age, and, at length, when he was with difficulty carried to the Church, and was not able to exhort the congregation at length, he was used simply to say at each meeting, My little children, love one another. At last the disciples and brethren were weary with hearing these words continually, and asked him, Master, wherefore ever sayest thou this only? Whereto he replied to them, worthy of John, It is the commandment of the Lord, and if this only be done, it is enough. (As found in Matins, The Divine Office, December 27, the Feast of Saint John the Evangelist.)
This is very important to discuss, if only for a moment, as the Ebionites were Judaizers who honored Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ as the Messias while denying that He was the Incarnate Word Who is the Co-Eternal, Co-Equal Son of God the Father. The Ebionites were really pioneers of an effort to "bridge" Christianity with Judaism, diabolical work that would be carried forth by Theodore Herzl, who died at the age of forty-four less than six months after Pope Saint Pius X had told him that the Catholic Church would churches to baptize all of the Jews if they resettled in the Holy Land, as he and those who followed after him infiltrated Protestant sects. It is something of the Ebionite spirit of syncretism that motivated the conciliar revolutionaries to effect a "new understanding" of the relationship between a dead, superseded religion, Judaism, with what was purported to be the Catholic Church. The Judaizing work of Jorge Mario Bergoglio is well-documened by now, and it is all condemned, every last bit of it, by the evangelical writings of Saint John the Evangelist.
Moreover, Saint John the Evangelist explained in what the true love of God consisted:
Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is born of God. And every one that loveth him who begot, loveth him also who is born of him. In this we know that we love the children of God: when we love God, and keep his commandments. For this is the charity of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments are not heavy. (1 John 5: 1-3)
Bergoglio corrupts all notion of the love of God while insisting that it is too much to expect for unrepentant sinners to convert and to keep God's commandments, falsely stating that "mercy" is all that is needed. Yet it is that God shows no mercy to those who refuse to keep His commandments and then make war upon those who insist that they do.
Saint John was a son of Our Lady by special designation, given to her by her own Divine Son Himself. We are her sons and daughters by means of adoption. It is thus incumbent upon us to ask her to foster a love for her Divine Son that is as unalloyed and as unspotted by the world as was the love of Saint John the Beloved, Who had the privilege accorded to none of the other Apostles: namely, to lay his head on Our Lord's breast at the Last Supper, thereby listening to the beats of Our Lord's Most Sacred Heart, the very fount of life and mercy:
Amen, amen I say to you: The servant is not greater than his lord; neither is the apostle greater than he that sent him. [17] If you know these things, you shall be blessed if you do them. [18] I speak not of you all: I know whom I have chosen. But that the scripture may be fulfilled: He that eateth bread with me, shall lift up his heel against me. [19] At present I tell you, before it come to pass: that when it shall come to pass, you may believe that I am he. [20] Amen, amen I say to you, he that receiveth whomsoever I send, receiveth me; and he that receiveth me, receiveth him that sent me.
[21] When Jesus had said these things, he was troubled in spirit; and he testified, and said: Amen, amen I say to you, one of you shall betray me. [22] The disciples therefore looked one upon another, doubting of whom he spoke. [23] Now there was leaning on Jesus' bosom one of his disciples, whom Jesus loved. [24] Simon Peter therefore beckoned to him, and said to him: Who is it of whom he speaketh? [25] He therefore, leaning on the breast of Jesus, saith to him: Lord, who is it?
[26] Jesus answered: He it is to whom I shall reach bread dipped. And when he had dipped the bread, he gave it to Judas Iscariot, the son of Simon. (John 13:16-26.)
We must ask Our Lady to help us have such a love for her Divine Son, a love that will impel us to stay at the foot of the Cross each and every day with Saint John at the Immemorial Mass of Tradition so that our love of the Divine Master will grow with every beat of our hearts, consecrated as they must be to her own Immaculate Heart and the Sacred Heart of Jesus that enfolded the virginal Apostle within Itself so completely, praying as many Rosaries each day as our states-in-life permit.
Ineed, we should consider praying an extra Rosary today in reparation for the insidious lie propagated by that master blasphemer of God, Antipope Emeritus Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI, who has dared to repeat the Modernist propaganda that the Beloved Apostle whose sanctity we commemorate today, John, a son of Zebedee, is not the human author of the Fourth Gospel, no less for the blasphemy of the late Joseph "Cardinal" Bernardin, who said that the Beloved Apostle is the source of anti-Semitism because of his accurate account of Our Lord's reproaches to the Jews and his fearlessness in pointing out the fierce opposition that the Pharisees and Scribes had to Our Lord even though they knew He was God in the very Flesh:
In the interim, as we await a scholarly resolution of the question of antisemitism in the New Testament, I would strongly urge that the Church adopt a pastoral approach. Father Raymond Brown, a renowned Catholic scholar on the Gospel of St. John, has suggested that the basis of a pastoral approach, at least with with respect to the Fourth Gospel, which is generally considered among the most problematic of all New Testament books in its outlook towards Jews and Judaism. In commenting on John's use of the term, "the Jews," Brown expresses his conviction that, by deliberately using this generic term (where other gospel writers refer to the Jewish authorities or the various Sacred Temple Jewish parties), John meant to extend to the synagogue of his own day blame that an earlier tradition had attributed to the Jewish authorities. Although John was not the first to engage in such extension, he is the most insistent New Testament author in this regard. Brown attributes this process in John to the persecution that Christians were experiencing during that time at the hands of the synagogue authorities. Jews who professed Jesus to be the Messiah had been officially expelled from Judaism, thus making them vulnerable to Roman investigation and punishment. Jews were tolerated by Rome, but who were these Christians whom the Jews disclaimed?
Father Brown maintains that this This is a key pastoral point. Christians today must come to see that such teaching, which an acknowledged part of their biblical heritage, can no longer be regarded as definitive teaching in light of our improved understanding of developments in the relationship between early Christianity and the Jewish community of the time. As Brown says in his book, The Community of the Beloved Disciple, "It would be incredible for a twentieth-century Christian to share or justify the Johannine contention that 'the Jews' are the children of the Devil, an affirmation which is placed on the lips of Jesus (John 8: 44)."
Negative passages such as these must be re-evaluated in light of the Second Vatican Council's strong affirmation in its Declaration on the Relation of the Church to Non-Christian Relations (Nostra Aetate) that Jews remain a covenanted people, revered by God. The teaching of recent Popes has also emphasized this. Pope John Paul II, in particular, has often highlighted the intimate bond that exists between Jews and Christians who are united in one ongoing covenant. ("Antisemitism: The Historical Legacy and the Continuing Challenge for Christians", Hebrew University, March 23, 1995.)
In other words, God the Holy Ghost must have been an "anti-Semite," or God the Holy Ghost did not inspire every word of Sacred Scripture. Saint John the Evangelist had a word or two about such blasphemy:
Him therefore when Peter had seen, he saith to Jesus: Lord, and what shall this man do?[22] Jesus saith to him: So I will have him to remain till I come, what is it to thee? follow thou me. [23] This saying therefore went abroad among the brethren, that that disciple should not die. And Jesus did not say to him: He should not die; but, So I will have him to remain till I come, what is it to thee? [24] This is that disciple who giveth testimony of these things, and hath written these things; and we know that his testimony is true. [25] But there are also many other things which Jesus did; which, if they were written every one, the world itself, I think, would not be able to contain the books that should be written. (John 21:21-25.)
Saint John the Evangelist wrote the very words and gave the account that God the Holy Ghost inspired him to provide us, and Our Lord Himself must have been guilty of "anti-Semitism" for uttering the words recorded by Saint John, and for choosing the virignal Apostle to keep His Most Blessed Mother company at the foot of the Holy Cross. What more proof does one need that the counterfeit church of conciliarism is not the Catholic Church?
As Father Benedict Baur, O.S.B., related in The Light of the World:
In the house of Mary, in Holy Mother the Church, we have infallible truth. John gives us this truth in his Gospel and in his life. This truth radiates from the incarnate Wisdom which we see in the manger on Christmas Day; its fruits are a life of purity, the forsaking of all that is sinful and unholy and a life centered on God.
When we celebrate Christmas in the proper spirit we, too, add our testimony to that of St. Stephen and St. John. "The light shineth in darkness, but the darkness did not comprehend it" (John 1: 15). We should add to the testimony of John the testimony of of our own faith. Still more should we bear witness to Christ by the purity of our lives, by the strength of our love of Christ, and by forsaking all that cannot with propriety be seen at the side of the crib and in the house of Mary. (Father Benedict Baur, O.S.B., The Light of the World, Volume I, B. Herder Book Company, 1954, p. 107.)
Dom Prosper Gueranger composed a beautiful and eloquent prayer to the Beloved Disciple that we should make our own today:
Beloved Disciple of the Babe of Bethlehem! – how great is thy happiness! how wonderful is the reward given to thy love and thy purity! In thee was fulfilled that word of thy Master: Blessed are the dean of heart; for they shall see God. Not only didst thou see this God-Man – thou wast his Friend, and on his Bosom didst rest thy head. John the Baptist trembles at having to bend the head of Jesus under the water of Jordan; Magdalene, though assured by his own lips that her pardon was perfect as her love, yet dares not raise her head, but keeps clinging to his feet; Thomas scarce presumes to obey him when he bids him put his finger into his wounded Side; – and thou, in the presence of all the Apostles, sittest close to Him, leaning thy head upon his Breast! Nor is it only Jesus in his Humanity that thou seest and possessest; but, because thy heart is pure, thou soarest, like an eagle, up to the Sun of Justice, and fixest thine eye upon him in the light inaccessible, wherein he dwelleth eternally with the Father and the Holy Ghost.
Thus was rewarded the fidelity wherewith thou didst keep intact for Jesus the precious treasure of thy Purity. And now, O worthy favourite of the great King! forget not us poor sinners. We believe and confess the Divinity of the Incarnate Word, whom thou hast evangelised unto us; but we desire to draw nigh to him during this holy season, now that he shows himself so desirous of our company, so humble, so full of love, so dear a Child, and so poor! Alas! our sins keep us back; our heart is not pure like thine; we have need of a Patron to introduce us to our Master’s Crib! [Isai. 1:3] Thou, O Beloved Disciple of the Emmanuel! thou must procure us this happiness. Thou hast shown us the Divinity of the Word in the bosom of the Eternal Father; lead us now to this same Word made flesh. Under thy patronage, Jesus will permit us to enter into the Stable, to stand near his Crib, to see with our eyes, and touch with our hands [1 John 1:1], this sweet Fruit of eternal Life. May it be granted us to contemplate the sweet Face of Him, that is our Saviour and thy Friend; to feel the throbs of that Heart, which loves both thee and us – and which thou didst see wounded by the Spear, on Calvary. It is good for us to fix ourselves here near the Crib of our Jesus, and share in the graces he there lavishes, and learn, as thou didst, the grand lesson of this Child’s simplicity; – thy prayers must get us all this.
Then too, as Son and Guardian of Mary, thou hast to present us to thine own and our Mother. Ask her to give us somewhat of the tender love wherewith she watches over the Crib of her Divine Son; to see in us the Brothers of that Child she bore; and to admit us to a share of the maternal affection she had for thee, the favoured confidant of the secrets of her Jesus.
We also pray to thee, O holy Apostle! for the Church of God. She was planted and watered by thy labours, embalmed with the celestial fragrance of thy virtues, and illumined by thy sublime teachings; – pray now, that these graces may bring forth their fruit, and that, to the end of her pilgrimage, faith may be firm, the love of Jesus fervent, and christian morals pure and holy. Thou tellest us, in thy Gospel, of a saying of thy Divine Master: I will not now call you my Servants, but my Friends [John 15:15]: pray, dear Saint, that there may come to this, from our hearts and lips, a response of love and courage, telling our Emmanuel, that, like thyself, we will follow him whithersoever he leads us.
Let us, on this second day after our Divine Infant’s Birth, meditate upon the Sleep he deigns to take. Let us consider how this God of all goodness, who has come down from heaven to invite his creature man to come to him and seek rest for his soul – seeks rest himself in our earthly home, and sanctifies, by his own divine Sleep, that rest, which to us is a necessity. We have just been dwelling, with delighted devotion, on the thought of his offering his Breast as a resting-place for the Beloved Disciple, and for all souls that imitate John in their love and devotedness: now, let us look at this our God, sweetly sleeping in his humble Crib, or on his Mother’s lap. (Dom Prosper Gueranger, O.S.B,, The Liturgical Year.)
May we call upon Saint John the Beloved to love the newborn Babe in Bethlehem with all of our hearts and to welcome anew every time He is enfleshed under the appearance of bread and wine in Holy Communion.
Our Lady, Mother of God, pray for us.
Saint Joseph, pray for us.
Saints Peter and Paul, pray for us.
Saint John the Baptist, pray for us.
Saint John the Evangelist, pray for us.
Saint Michael the Archangel, pray for us.
Saint Gabriel the Archangel, pray for us.
Saint Raphael the Archangel, pray for us.
Saints Joachim and Anne, pray for us.
Saints Caspar, Melchior, and Balthasar, pray for us.