The Dimond brothers arbitrarily ignore a major heresy of Antipope Benedict XV, and hypocritically so. It's so simple and yet they don't see it. No doubt this is because of a spiritual blindness brought on by their fondness for sacrilegiously receiving the sacraments from heretic, apostate and schismatic clergy.
Please connect the dots below, and then reject the heretic Dimonds as any proper Catholic would.
On page 171 of the brothers book Heresies of John Paul II, they quote a homily of Antipope John Paul II in which he states that "the blood of Christ reaches all and saves all." They correctly say that this is in contrast with the dogmatic teachings of the Church. Then they quote the Council of Trent:
Pope Paul III, Council of Trent, Sess. 6, Ch. 3, 1547, ex cathedra: "But though He died for all, yet not all receive the benefit of His death, but only those whom the merit of His passion is imparted."
They follow up by saying, " Only those who are freed from original sin by Baptism, and united to Him through the sacraments and the true faith, receive the benefit of Christ's death." If the Dimonds want to remain consistent, they would have to condemn Benedict XV for this statement:
Antipope Benedict XV, Ad Beatissimi Apostolorum, #1, 1914: "For the whole of mankind was freed from the slavery of sin by the shedding of the blood of Jesus Christ as their ransom, and there is no one who is excluded from the benefit of this Redemption ..."
How do we know the Dimonds are spiritually blind? The refuse to connect the dots. Further evidence that these men were not only antipopes, but Free Masons as well, can be found in their very same writings.
Antipope Benedict XV, Ad Beatissimi Apostolorum, #6: "Our Lord Jesus Christ came down from Heaven for the very purpose of restoring amongst men the Kingdom of Peace, which the envy of the devil had destroyed, and it was His will that it should rest on no other foundation than that of brotherly love... He teaches all men, without distinction of nationality or of language, or of ideas, to pray in the words: 'Our Father, who are in Heaven,'"