Catholic Info
Traditional Catholic Faith => Crisis in the Church => Topic started by: Geremia on August 08, 2019, 05:46:32 PM
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Simone Weil (https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/philosophy-and-religion/philosophy-biographies/simone-weil#citationTrigger-437202) was a neo-Cathar (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01267e.htm) whom John XXIII ("Oh yes, I love this soul!" (https://books.google.com/books?id=B1NOn1byLnEC&pg=PR12#q="O yes, I love this soul")) and Paul VI both considered important influences in their intellectual deformation.
Year of Three Popes p. 2 (https://archive.org/details/yearofthreepopes00hebb/page/2):
He [Paul VI] was theologically [de]formed by reading [Liberal] Maritain, [ecuмaniac/Protestant] Congar, and [nature≡grace] de Lubac, and intellectually [de]formed by [Jansenist] Pascal, Bernanos, and [Jew-neo-Cathar] Simone Weil.
Weil wrote a letter circa 1940 in which "she spoke of her admiration for the Catharist (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01267e.htm) movement and used the word adherence as opposed to curiosity" (Joseph Marie Perrin, O.P., Simone Weil As We Knew Her (https://isidore.co/calibre/#panel=book_details&book_id=7109) pt. 1, ch. 6, fn. 2).
Like the Cathars (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01267e.htm), Weil
- rejected the Old Testament, (Cathars rejected the Old Testament in part because they thought the material world and marriage, cf. Gen. 1:28: "be fruitful and multiply", are evil.)
- was a dualist, (cf. #1 above.)
- was a revolutionary, anarchist, and Trotskyite, (Cathars were also revolutionaries, being against oaths, the bedrock of feudalism and medieval society.)
- starved herself to death, a "virtuous" act Albigenses/Cathars called the endura (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01267e.htm#B).
During this octave of the feast of St. Dominic, may he intercede for the extirpation from the Church of Modernism—the synthesis of all heresies, including those of the neo-Cathars and Albigensians!