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Author Topic: Cardinal collapses at Vatican II  (Read 4304 times)

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Cardinal collapses at Vatican II
« Reply #10 on: January 14, 2014, 11:38:50 PM »
I attended the Funeral Mass for Cardinal McIntyre. The Funeral Mass
in the new rite was held in a very modernistic Catholic Church on
Wilshire Blvd, in Los Angeles. I forgot the name of the Church and
never been back.  The Church had a very modernistic statue of the
Blessed Virgin Mary at the front of the church.
I remember in exiting the church, Mayor Tom Bradley was shaking
everybody hands including me.
I just wanted to be civil.

Cardinal collapses at Vatican II
« Reply #11 on: January 15, 2014, 12:46:24 AM »
edit :reading:


Offline Joe

Cardinal collapses at Vatican II
« Reply #12 on: January 15, 2014, 08:47:14 AM »
Maybe the other Cardinals should've taken more heed of his demise...

Cardinal collapses at Vatican II
« Reply #13 on: January 15, 2014, 09:17:10 AM »
Quote from: Alex
Below is a photograph of Cardinal MacIntyre who got sick during the Vatican II Council and is carried out right in front of the pope and 25 cardinals. I don't know exactly what happened to him but I wouldn't be surprised if he colapsed from the stress of witnessing the Mass and Catholic tradition being destroyed.

Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles from 1948–1978, was staunchly conservative. He once expressed caution towards "an obvious trend toward laxity" in the morality of films[, and accused Bishop James Shannon's liberal views as constituting "incipient schism". He was one of the few American bishops to oppose the liturgical revolution of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965)[4]. McIntyre, like his colleague in New York, Francis Cardinal Spellman, refused to implement these conciliar liturgical innovations. On October 23, 1962, McIntyre addressed the Council fathers:

"The schema on the Liturgy proposes confusion and complication. If it is adopted, it would be an immediate scandal for our people. The continuity of the Mass must be kept. The tradition of the sacred ceremonies must be preserved..."



The Cardinal on the left, looking on, is Joseph Card. Frings, Archbishop of Cologne,
who seconded the subversion of the progressists at this infamous council.
However, shortly before his death he had serious doubts about his involvement at the council.

Offline Joe

Cardinal collapses at Vatican II
« Reply #14 on: January 15, 2014, 09:29:00 AM »
Quote from: vonGalen
Quote from: Alex
Below is a photograph of Cardinal MacIntyre who got sick during the Vatican II Council and is carried out right in front of the pope and 25 cardinals. I don't know exactly what happened to him but I wouldn't be surprised if he colapsed from the stress of witnessing the Mass and Catholic tradition being destroyed.

Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles from 1948–1978, was staunchly conservative. He once expressed caution towards "an obvious trend toward laxity" in the morality of films[, and accused Bishop James Shannon's liberal views as constituting "incipient schism". He was one of the few American bishops to oppose the liturgical revolution of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965)[4]. McIntyre, like his colleague in New York, Francis Cardinal Spellman, refused to implement these conciliar liturgical innovations. On October 23, 1962, McIntyre addressed the Council fathers:

"The schema on the Liturgy proposes confusion and complication. If it is adopted, it would be an immediate scandal for our people. The continuity of the Mass must be kept. The tradition of the sacred ceremonies must be preserved..."



The Cardinal on the left, looking on, is Joseph Card. Frings, Archbishop of Cologne,
who seconded the subversion of the progressists at this infamous council.
However, shortly before his death he had serious doubts about his involvement at the council.


It seems that many people have doubts about their actioins on earth on their deathbed.  The inventor of the AK-47, one of the most widely produced assault rifles on the planet, wrote a letter to the Vatican expressing sorrow for his invention on his deathbed.