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Author Topic: Which Book Best Describes the Crisis?  (Read 5371 times)

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Offline Yeti

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Re: Which Book Best Describes the Crisis?
« Reply #25 on: May 22, 2024, 11:37:02 AM »
No errors at all in Bread of Life. In fact, the book was heavily scrutinised by diocesan censors in search of any doctrinal deviation. None could be found.
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How do you know this? Does the book have an Imprimatur?

Offline Matthew

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Re: Which Book Best Describes the Crisis?
« Reply #26 on: May 22, 2024, 11:37:40 AM »
Angelus Press books on the Crisis. Anything by Archbishop Lefebvre.


Offline St Giles

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Re: Which Book Best Describes the Crisis?
« Reply #27 on: May 23, 2024, 10:02:20 AM »
As far as Angelus Press books go, I have one I'm about to read:
The Problem of the Liturgical Reform
A Theological and Liturgical Study
by the SSPX
Second printing (Aug 2001)

Fr Wickens in Christ Defended highly recommends Michael Davies' Apologia No. I & II back in 1988.  He says they are a history of ABL and his contacts with Rome, bishops, and Vatican congregations since right after the council. He's hoping for a volume 3.
Has anyone here reads those?

It would be good to get some of these books republished if they are hard to come by.

Whatever happened to The Neumann Press? I can't find info on them.

Re: Which Book Best Describes the Crisis?
« Reply #28 on: May 23, 2024, 04:01:48 PM »
.

How do you know this? Does the book have an Imprimatur?



Concerning “Bread of Life” by Fr. Leonard Feeney  --
 
Pope John XXIII assigned Monsignor Francis Cassano (deceased) to review and examine Bread of Life by Father Leonard Feeney.  He was to find any errors - nay, heresy.  He reported there was nothing "contrary to faith" in Bread of Life.  Msgr. Cassano eventually had a parish on the Hudson River and attested his conclusion to many people, including to St. Benedict Center itself.  (This Monsignor was not a "nobody" - he had also been assigned by Rome to investigate the case of the mystic stigmatist, Mother Aiello.)  

We hear lots of calumnies from Rome (and others) about Fr. Feeney -

- but we never seem to hear of this particular report by Msgr. Cassano – which found no flaw in Father’s famous book, “Bread of Life.”

Re: Which Book Best Describes the Crisis?
« Reply #29 on: May 23, 2024, 06:27:51 PM »
Gethsemane: The Origins and Rise of the Intellectual Revolution in the Church by Giuseppe Cardinal Siri.

Sophia Institute Press recently reissued it. I didn't get around to reading it but had it on my shelf for a while for this reason.