Here’s a secret: if you want to push something in the Ape Church and the Roman Usurpers are hesitant, take a page from the American Bishops. Do what you want, lie about it, when Rome says STOP just say it’s longstanding custom, and voila! Permission. It’s how we got Communion in the hand.
I have been reading your articles for a very long time and have agreed with much that you have said since Leo assumed the office of Pope. I recently read an article at Rorate that put me in mind of you, and so I thought I would send you the link:
This mockery of a “theologian” is not just treading down the wide path to destruction and damnation: he’s on the Enemy’s version of the Autobahn. I doubt this heretic has any real notion of the rebellion against Christ and His Church that he is leading people in to. Or perhaps he does, and think that he will be rewarded by his real Master after he shuffles off his mortal coil, when in fact he won’t get better accommodations in Hell. He’ll go straight to the lowermost basement, where all the others who engage in or preach rebellion and the highest of treasons.
This isn't a new strategy as it has been used in certain places for over a century.
One notable figure using this strategy was Fr. Pius Parsch. (May 18, 1884 – March 11, 1954).
He was a leading figure in the Liturgical Movement. The Liturgical Movement was a 19th- and 20th-century movement of scholarship for the reform of Christian worship. It began in the Catholic Church and spread to many other Christian churches including the Anglican Communion, Lutheran and some other Protestant churches. Its aims included promoting informed lay participation, reordering church architecture, recovering elements of early Christian liturgy, and clarifying the structure and language of worship. The movement significantly influenced liturgical reforms across these traditions, most notably those adopted by the Catholic Church at the Second Vatican Council.
Parsch promoted the "volksliturgischen" or "People's Mass". This early practice of the liturgical renewal was notable for celebration at a free standing altar with the priest facing the people (which he instituted at St. Gertrud Kirche), gothic vestments and an emphasis on the liturgical seasons rather than the calendar of the saints.
Here’s a secret: if you want to push something in the Ape Church and the Roman Usurpers are hesitant, take a page from the American Bishops. Do what you want, lie about it, when Rome says STOP just say it’s longstanding custom, and voila! Permission. It’s how we got Communion in the hand.
“Some things simply evolve. The attempts at control by Vatican authorities are now only partially effective.”
And the blind sheep continue to tithe to a false church, while the remnant keeps the Faith, praying for their conversion. A narrow path.
Dear Radical, my brother in Christ,v
I have been reading your articles for a very long time and have agreed with much that you have said since Leo assumed the office of Pope. I recently read an article at Rorate that put me in mind of you, and so I thought I would send you the link:
https://rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-church-will-give-birth-to.html
I hope you will read it. Many Blessings.
In Christ,
Richard
Thank you for posting this link.
Blessings from Aus.
This mockery of a “theologian” is not just treading down the wide path to destruction and damnation: he’s on the Enemy’s version of the Autobahn. I doubt this heretic has any real notion of the rebellion against Christ and His Church that he is leading people in to. Or perhaps he does, and think that he will be rewarded by his real Master after he shuffles off his mortal coil, when in fact he won’t get better accommodations in Hell. He’ll go straight to the lowermost basement, where all the others who engage in or preach rebellion and the highest of treasons.
This isn't a new strategy as it has been used in certain places for over a century.
One notable figure using this strategy was Fr. Pius Parsch. (May 18, 1884 – March 11, 1954).
He was a leading figure in the Liturgical Movement. The Liturgical Movement was a 19th- and 20th-century movement of scholarship for the reform of Christian worship. It began in the Catholic Church and spread to many other Christian churches including the Anglican Communion, Lutheran and some other Protestant churches. Its aims included promoting informed lay participation, reordering church architecture, recovering elements of early Christian liturgy, and clarifying the structure and language of worship. The movement significantly influenced liturgical reforms across these traditions, most notably those adopted by the Catholic Church at the Second Vatican Council.
Parsch promoted the "volksliturgischen" or "People's Mass". This early practice of the liturgical renewal was notable for celebration at a free standing altar with the priest facing the people (which he instituted at St. Gertrud Kirche), gothic vestments and an emphasis on the liturgical seasons rather than the calendar of the saints.