Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari  (Read 2773 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Clint

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 161
  • Reputation: +299/-0
  • Gender: Male
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Is the Vatican using
    Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX?
    By John Vennari

    (from: http://www.cfnews.org/page10/page40/page40.html)


    “ I myself saw, in the years after 1988, how the return of communities which had been separated from Rome changed their interior attitudes; I saw how returning to the bigger and broader Church enabled them to move beyond one-sided positions and broke down rigidity so that positive energies could emerge for the whole.”
    – Pope Benedict XVI’s 2009 Letter to World’s Bishops on the “Remission” of SSPX “Excommunications”





    Jiu-Jitsu is a form of Martial Arts where you use your opponent’s strengths against him. I cannot help but wonder whether this is the tactic used by today’s Vatican against the Society of St. Pius X.

    What is the strength of the Traditional Catholic if not a desire to be obedient; love of the papacy; filial piety; good order, and the longing to be instrumental in helping to bring an end to today’s unprecedented crisis of Faith.

    We now hear unofficially – that is, not directly from Pope Benedict himself – that for “regularization,” the SSPX will not be required to accept the Second Vatican Council and the New Mass. We hear the Pope is ready to grant this because he wants the SSPX to help him correct the crisis in the Church.

    Indeed, as I have said in the past: if it is true the SSPX does not have to accept the Council, this could be a real game-changer. It could mark the effective end of Vatican II. For it is impossible that one group of Catholics in the world could be considered “exempt” from embracing the Council, and other Catholics are still bound to accept it.

    It is for this reason, however, that I believe we will never see Pope Benedict XVI give a written guarantee that the SSPX does not have to accept the Council. And if such guarantees are not carved in stone, publicly for all to see, then any agreement is fraught with peril.

    None of us can predict the future, and I will be happy if proven wrong. But if I were a betting man, I would place my little stack on Benedict protecting Vatican II to the end.

    We also hear rumors that Pope Benedict has somehow changed, that he is more traditional than he was in the past.

    I was privileged to study philosophy with Dr. Raphael Waters, one of the top Thomists in North America. It was he who insisted that, in the realm of philosophy, the argument from authority is always the weakest. Evidence alone matters.

    I cannot help but apply this same dictum to the rumor that Benedict has become more traditional. Maybe it’s true, but since “the mode of acting follows the mode of being,” the recent actions of Pope Benedict lead us to believe there is not much change.

    First of all, we have heard this type of claim in the past, as far back as 1988.

    This is not intended to pick on any one group, but I well remember going to see one of the first Fraternity of St. Peter priests give a lecture in the summer of 1988 in North Jersey. He was full of high praise for Cardinal Ratzinger. When someone from the audience brought up Cardinal Ratzinger’s modernism, the priest froze the audience with a stare and said haughtily, “Well, you don’t know the new Cardinal Ratzinger!” As time proved, there wasn’t much new.

    As for Pope Benedict: we will look at what he has said in the past, which indicates his mindset his entire career, and then look at recent actions to see if we note any considerable change.

    Consistent Progressivism

    Before I start with my observations, I would urge the reader to resist an emotional response. When I point out these simple facts, I’ve seen people go shrieking into the snowbanks, “You’re attacking the Pope,” or “You’re flirting with sedevacantism.”

    None of what I say is an attack. I simply lay out the facts without emotion. Further, I have never even been tempted toward the sedevacantist position. I see sedevacantism as a kind of despair that ends up asking more questions than it answers.

    Cardinal Ratzinger published some shocking statements in his 1986 work, Principles of Catholic Theology, a book I would never use to teach the Catholic Faith. This is not the only book that contains disturbing passages from the Cardinal, but it will suffice for the sake of examples.

    On page 202, Cardinal Ratzinger says, “The Catholic does not insist on the dissolution of the Protestant confession and the demolition of their churches, but hopes rather that they will be strengthened in their confessions and in their ecclesial reality”. The obvious conclusion: the writer hopes that Protestants will become strong and cling even more tightly to heretical creeds solemnly anathematized by the infallible Council of Trent.

    On page 381, Cardinal Ratzinger writes, “[Gaudium et Spes] as a whole, we might say that (in conjunction with the texts on religious liberty and world religions) it is a revision of the Syllabus of Pius IX, a kind of countersyllabus ... Let us be content to say here that the text serves as a countersyllabus and, as such, represents on the part of the Church, an attempt at an official reconciliation with the new era inaugurated in 1789. …”

    He speaks of the “one-sidedness of the position adopted by the Church under Pius IX and Pius X” and claims the Syllabus represents “an obsolete Church-state relationship.”

    In other the words, the writer is calling two of the greatest Popes in Church history “one-sided” in their efforts to protect the Church from the errors of liberalism and modernism. The Cardinal goes on to celebrate that Vatican II made an “attempt” to “correct” and “counter” the teaching of Blessed Pope Pius IX and Pope Saint Pius X, and to reconcile Herself instead with the Masonic French Revolution and the Enlightenment.

    On page 191 of the same book, we read, “There can be no return to the Syllabus” of Blessed Pope Pius IX. This can only please Freemasons who have worked to overthrow the great Syllabus since it first appeared in 1864

    The fact that he recognizes Vatican II as a countersyllabus demonstrates the Council as a rupture with the past. Any talk of the Council being understood within a “hermeneutic of continuity” is not realistic.

    Cardinal Ratzinger says on page 334, “The impetus given by Teilhard de Chardin exerted a wide influence. With daring vision, it incorporated the historical movement of Christianity into the great cosmic process of evolution.”

    Teilhard was a pantheist and evolutionist, and was admired and defended by Ratzinger’s mentor, Father Henri de Lubac. The Cardinal goes on to rejoice that this Teilhardian evolutionary influence was particularly evident in the Council docuмent, Gaudium et spes.

    “We can not resist them too firmly”

    Of traditional Catholics who oppose Vatican II, Cardinal Ratzinger says on page 389: “Was the Council a wrong road that we must now retrace if we are to save the Church? The voices of those who say that it is are becoming louder and their followers more numerous. Among the more obvious phenomena of the last years must be counted the increasing number of integralist [traditionalist] groups in which the desire for piety, for the sense of the mystery, is finding satisfaction. We must be on our guard against minimizing these movements. Without a doubt, they represent a sectarian zealotry that is the antithesis of Catholicity. We can not resist them too firmly.”

    We see similar sentiments on the same point from Cardinal Ratzinger - now Benedict XVI – only three years ago.

    On March 10, 2009, writing to the world’s bishops about the lifting of the alleged “excommunication” of the SSPX, Pope Benedict reveals what he regards as positive elements to “regularization” of Traditional groups; they tend to soften their stand:

    “I myself saw, in the years after 1988, how the return of communities which had been separated from Rome changed their interior attitudes; I saw how returning to the bigger and broader Church enabled them to move beyond one-sided positions and broke down rigidity so that positive energies could emerge for the whole.”

    Wait a minute. Did we not hear Cardinal Ratzinger use the term “one-sidedness” before?

    Yes, it was in his denunciation of Pius IX and his 1864 Syllabus of Errors, the “one-sidedness of the position adopted by the Church under Pius IX and Pius X”.

    It is the same terminology we heard from him in his 1986 Principles of Catholic Theology.

    And what do the traditional groups – especially the Society of St. Pius X – represent but fierce adhesion to the teaching of Popes Pius IX and Pius X?

    On this point, I wish to recount that I had gone to the Ecclesia Dei office in 1994. I was then with a group that wanted to learn first-hand what “regularization” entailed. The priest at the Ecclesia Dei office boasted with pride that the newly “regularized” Society of Saint Vincent Ferrer was “now writing articles defending Vatican II’s religious liberty.”

    Likewise the monks at Le Barroux, not long after their “regularization,” began producing works defending the Council’s religious liberty, and even defending the New Catechism.

    So when Pope Benedict recently celebrates that “regularized” groups “change their interior attitudes”, and “break down their rigidity” and “move beyond one-sidedness”, I can’t see any other way to interpret this than his delight that once-traditional orders now defend the very points about the Council they opposed prior to “regularization”.

    ѕуηαgσgυєs and Assisi

    In 2007 Pope Benedict made the important step of admitting the Tridentine Mass was never forbidden. But in 2008, Pope Benedict shocked the Traditional Catholic world by changing the Tridentine Mass’ Good Friday Prayer for the Jєωs.

    On page 106 of his 2010 book Light of the World, Benedict himself admits the change was enacted because it was offensive to Jєωs, and because the prayer, he claimed, was theologically inaccurate.

    When the interviewer asks Benedict why in February 2008 he changed the Old Good Friday prayer, he answered:

    “…in the old liturgy this point seemed to me to require a modification. The old formulation really was offensive to Jєωs and failed to express the positively overall intrinsic unity between the Old and New Testaments. I believed that a modification of this passage of the old liturgy was necessary, especially, as I have already said, out of consideration for our relation with our Jєωιѕн friends. I altered the text in such a way as to express our faith that Christ is the Savior for all, that there are not two channels of salvation, so that Christ is also the redeemer of the Jєωs, and not just of the Gentiles. But the new formulation also shifts the focus from a direct petition for the conversion of the Jєωs in a missionary sense to a plea that the Lord might bring about the hour in history when we may all be united.”

    Nowhere do we see in his new formula a prayer for the Jєωs’ conversion (I detailed this and more in my March 2011 article, “Common Mission and ‘Significant Silence’”)

    Pope Benedict has also made a point to visit ѕуηαgσgυєs.

    Whereas John Paul II visited one ѕуηαgσgυє during 26 years as Pope, Benedict visited three ѕуηαgσgυєs in the space of 6 years. On his last visit to the Rome ѕуηαgσgυє in January 2010, Rabbi David Rosen exulted that “Pope Benedict had institutionalized revolution.”

    Then we come to the latest meeting of Assisi, October, 2011.Here Pope Benedict called the leaders of the world religions together for the cause of peace. I attended the event. In the Basilica of Saint Mary’s of the Holy Angels, the fourth most venerated shrine in the Catholic world, Wanda Abimbola was allowed to invoke the god and goddesses of the Yaruba religion from inside the Church’s sanctuary. A Hindu also invoked his own version of god “I see you in each hand and in each foot… I bow down to you in all them,” The Hindu went on to announce the relativist principle that “the truth is one,” but “announced in different ways.”

    These invocations took no one by surprise. They were printed in the full color booklet I received at the Press Office the day prior to the event.

    The Assisi event gives visual expression to the greatest heresy of our time, that any religion is good enough for salvation. It is religious indifferentism enfleshed.

    One final point about Assisi. I was recently on a webradio talk show with Colleen Hammond, Louis Verrechio and others. Louis Verrechio is a true gentleman, is no sedevacantist, and is most respectful of Pope Benedict XVI.

    Yet Assisi was so scandalous that he felt compelled to admit on the air: “Even prior to the meeting the Holy Father announced in the first general audience of 2011 his intentions to go to Assisi and to convene this third gathering ... And he said that the aim of this event was to invite peoples of many different religions, the ones that John just named, to gather with him ‘to solemnly renew the commitment of believers of every religion to live their own religious faith as a service to the cause of peace’.

    “Now this is an indication of a couple of things to me,” continued Mr. Verrechio. “One, is how much we have to pray for our Holy Father, he is surrounded by enemies, he’s pulled in all sorts of different directions, and he needs our prayers for strength. But it’s an indication of how far we have fallen over the last two millennia, [especially] in the last four decades or so. It would have been absolutely unthinkable for a Roman Pontiff to suggest that non-Catholics do well to persist in their false religion for any reason, much less with the implication that doing so could possibly render a service to the cause of peace. And as John said, it is simply not a Catholic thought.”

    Thus I would be perfectly happy to learn that Pope Benedict has secretly – very secretly – become more Traditional. But as Dr. Waters rightly said, “evidence alone matters.”

    The Council

    Add to these difficulties the opposition from most of the Curia and modern Catholics around the world to anything that would diminish Vatican II.

    As noted last month, Cardinal Koch from the Vatican already stated publicly that all Catholics – SSPX included – are bound to accept the Council. Abraham Foxman, from the Anti-Defamation League, issued a May 31 press release criticizing Cardinal Brandmuller who suggested that Nostre Aetate, Vatican II’s Decree on the Jєωs, is not a binding docuмent, and praising Cardinal Koch for his claim that Catholics are bound to accept all of the Council, Nostre Aetate included.

    Jєωιѕн groups such as the ADL do not want to see the SSPX “regularized”. As I reported two months ago in CFN, a local rabbi told a Buffalo reporter that he and his fellow rabbis are nervous about a possible “regularization” of the SSPX. They fear it may end up with the Vatican returning to the Traditional Catholic doctrine that the Old Covenant is superseded by the New. It seems these Rabbis have a better grasp of some of the issues at stake than do many traditional Catholics. There is little doubt the rabbis and Jєωιѕн groups are voicing their concerns to Rome.

    SSPX and Diocesan Bishops

    We will now touch upon the “shock heard round the world”.

    Though nothing is yet finalized, it appears Rome insists a “regularized” SSPX can not set up new foundations without the permission of the local bishop.

    In his recent DICI interview of June 8, discussing the Personal Prelature offered by Rome, Bishop Bernard Fellay said, “However, and let us say this clearly, if a personal prelature were granted to us, our situation would not be the same [as the Opus Dei]. In order to understand better what would happen, we must reflect that our status would be much more similar to that of a military ordinariate, because we would have ordinary jurisdiction over the faithful. Thus we would be like a sort of diocese, the jurisdiction of which extends to all its faithful regardless of their territorial situation. All the chapels, churches, priories, schools, and works of the Society and of the affiliated religious congregations would be recognized with a real autonomy for their ministry. It is still true — since it is Church law — that in order to open a new chapel or to found a work, it would be necessary to have the permission of the local ordinary. We have quite obviously reported to Rome how difficult our present situation was in the dioceses, and Rome is still working on it. Here or there, this difficulty will be real, but since when is life without difficulties?”

    SSPX Bishop Tissier de Mallerais takes a dim view of this proposal. In a June 1 interview with the French journal Rivarol, Bishop Tissier said, “According to the project of prelature, we would not be free to create new priories without the permission of the local bishops and, additionally, all our recent foundations would have to be confirmed by these same bishops. It would thus mean subjugating us quite unnecessarily to an overall Modernist episcopate.”

    Finally, on the doctrinal level, it appears nothing is signed, nothing is yet public, nothing is carved in stone.

    On June 13, a meeting was held between Bishop Fellay and the Vatican’s Cardinal Levada. Reports indicate there is still no agreement on the doctrinal preamble.

    A press release from Menzingan the following day said Bishop Fellay “spelled out the doctrinal difficulties posed by the Second Vatican Council and the Novus Ordo Missae” to Cardinal Levada. “The desire for additional clarifications could result in a new phase of discussions.”

    Also on June 14, for what it’s worth, Le Figaro reported that Bishop Fellay returned from the Vatican “with a Rome dossier that is heavier than what had been foreseen.”

    Cardinal Joachim Meisner of Cologne recently said he could imagine a good working relationship between the Church and the Society of St. Pius X, although there was “still a long way to go.”

    The General Chapter

    From July 1 to 14, the Society of St. Pius X will hold its General Chapter where these issues will be discussed. It is common knowledge that not everyone in the SSPX thinks regularization at this time is a good move. As is now public news, Bishop Williamson, Bishop Tissier de Mallerais and Bishop de Galarreta collectively voiced their concerns against it to Bishop Fellay.

    On May 1, 2005, twelve days after the election of Pope Benedict XVI, in a speech I gave about the new Pope, I made the observation: “I believe he [Benedict XVI] has the potential to split the traditionalist camp right in half, and to split traditionalist groups right in half, because so many are enamored with those good things he has said about the Latin Mass.”

    I also said at the time what I believe to be still the case today: Pope Benedict XVI is first and foremost a man of Vatican II.

    Thus we should redouble our prayers for a happy outcome of the upcoming General Chapter. My own prayers for the SSPX — now and during the crucial meeting in July — is that they will approach this latest overture from Rome with caution, caution and more caution.



    Offline Clint

    • Jr. Member
    • **
    • Posts: 161
    • Reputation: +299/-0
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #1 on: June 25, 2012, 06:09:15 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Briefs from article:


    Indeed, as I have said in the past: if it is true the SSPX does not have to accept the Council, this could be a real game-changer. It could mark the effective end of Vatican II. For it is impossible that one group of Catholics in the world could be considered “exempt” from embracing the Council, and other Catholics are still bound to accept it.

    ... But if I were a betting man, I would place my little stack on Benedict protecting Vatican II to the end.

    We also hear rumors that Pope Benedict has somehow changed, that he is more traditional than he was in the past. ... “the mode of acting follows the mode of being,” the recent actions of Pope Benedict lead us to believe there is not much change.

    As for Pope Benedict: we will look at what he has said in the past, which indicates his mindset his entire career, and then look at recent actions to see if we note any considerable change.

    Consistent Progressivism

    Cardinal Ratzinger published some shocking statements in his 1986 work, Principles of Catholic Theology,

    On page 202, Cardinal Ratzinger says, “The Catholic does not insist on the dissolution of the Protestant confession and the demolition of their churches, but hopes rather that they will be strengthened in their confessions and in their ecclesial reality”. The obvious conclusion: the writer hopes that Protestants will become strong and cling even more tightly to heretical creeds solemnly anathematized by the infallible Council of Trent.

    On page 381, Cardinal Ratzinger writes, “[Gaudium et Spes] as a whole, we might say that (in conjunction with the texts on religious liberty and world religions) it is a revision of the Syllabus of Pius IX, a kind of countersyllabus ... Let us be content to say here that the text serves as a countersyllabus and, as such, represents on the part of the Church, an attempt at an official reconciliation with the new era inaugurated in 1789. …”

    He speaks of the “one-sidedness of the position adopted by the Church under Pius IX and Pius X” and claims the Syllabus represents “an obsolete Church-state relationship.”

    In other the words, the writer is calling two of the greatest Popes in Church history “one-sided” in their efforts to protect the Church from the errors of liberalism and modernism. The Cardinal goes on to celebrate that Vatican II made an “attempt” to “correct” and “counter” the teaching of Blessed Pope Pius IX and Pope Saint Pius X, and to reconcile Herself instead with the Masonic French Revolution and the Enlightenment.

    On page 191 of the same book, we read, “There can be no return to the Syllabus” of Blessed Pope Pius IX. This can only please Freemasons who have worked to overthrow the great Syllabus since it first appeared in 1864

    The fact that he recognizes Vatican II as a countersyllabus demonstrates the Council as a rupture with the past. Any talk of the Council being understood within a “hermeneutic of continuity” is not realistic.

    ... The Cardinal goes on to rejoice that this Teilhardian evolutionary influence was particularly evident in the Council docuмent, Gaudium et spes.

    “We can not resist them too firmly”

    Of traditional Catholics who oppose Vatican II, Cardinal Ratzinger says on page 389:... “ Among the more obvious phenomena of the last years must be counted the increasing number of integralist [traditionalist] groups in which the desire for piety, for the sense of the mystery, is finding satisfaction. We must be on our guard against minimizing these movements. Without a doubt, they represent a sectarian zealotry that is the antithesis of Catholicity. We can not resist them too firmly.”

    We see similar sentiments on the same point from Cardinal Ratzinger - now Benedict XVI – only three years ago.

    “I myself saw, in the years after 1988, how the return of communities which had been separated from Rome changed their interior attitudes; I saw how returning to the bigger and broader Church enabled them to move beyond one-sided positions and broke down rigidity so that positive energies could emerge for the whole.”

    Wait a minute. Did we not hear Cardinal Ratzinger use the term “one-sidedness” before?

    Yes, it was in his denunciation of Pius IX and his 1864 Syllabus of Errors, the “one-sidedness of the position adopted by the Church under Pius IX and Pius X”.

    It is the same terminology we heard from him in his 1986 Principles of Catholic Theology.

    And what do the traditional groups – especially the Society of St. Pius X – represent but fierce adhesion to the teaching of Popes Pius IX and Pius X?


    On this point, I wish to recount that I had gone to the Ecclesia Dei office in 1994. I was then with a group that wanted to learn first-hand what “regularization” entailed. The priest at the Ecclesia Dei office boasted with pride that the newly “regularized” Society of Saint Vincent Ferrer was “now writing articles defending Vatican II’s religious liberty.”

    Likewise the monks at Le Barroux, not long after their “regularization,” began producing works defending the Council’s religious liberty, and even defending the New Catechism.

    So when Pope Benedict recently celebrates that “regularized” groups “change their interior attitudes”, and “break down their rigidity” and “move beyond one-sidedness”, I can’t see any other way to interpret this than his delight that once-traditional orders now defend the very points about the Council they opposed prior to “regularization”.

    ѕуηαgσgυєs and Assisi

    In 2007 Pope Benedict made the important step of admitting the Tridentine Mass was never forbidden. But in 2008, Pope Benedict shocked the Traditional Catholic world by changing the Tridentine Mass’ Good Friday Prayer for the Jєωs.

    .. On his last visit to the Rome ѕуηαgσgυє in January 2010, Rabbi David Rosen exulted that “Pope Benedict had institutionalized revolution.”

    The Assisi event gives visual expression to the greatest heresy of our time, that any religion is good enough for salvation. It is religious indifferentism enfleshed.

    ...Thus I would be perfectly happy to learn that Pope Benedict has secretly – very secretly – become more Traditional. But as Dr. Waters rightly said, “evidence alone matters.”

    The Council


    As noted last month, Cardinal Koch from the Vatican already stated publicly that all Catholics – SSPX included – are bound to accept the Council.

    SSPX and Diocesan Bishops

     It is still true — since it is Church law — that in order to open a new chapel or to found a work, it would be necessary to have the permission of the local ordinary.

    The General Chapter

    On May 1, 2005, twelve days after the election of Pope Benedict XVI, in a speech I gave about the new Pope, I made the observation: “I believe he [Benedict XVI] has the potential to split the traditionalist camp right in half, and to split traditionalist groups right in half, because so many are enamored with those good things he has said about the Latin Mass.”

    I also said at the time what I believe to be still the case today: Pope Benedict XVI is first and foremost a man of Vatican II.



    Offline Ethelred

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1222
    • Reputation: +2267/-0
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #2 on: June 26, 2012, 05:31:35 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Four most excellents posts by Fr. Domenico on Ignis Ardens, in the same named thread.
    He's been ordained as a priest by Archbishop Lefebvre :


    Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 25 2012, 11:48 GMT

    Quote from: Dawn Marie @ Jun 25 2012, 11:32 GMT
    Bottom line-Bishop Fellay has NOT signed anything, he isn't going to sign anything and the General Chapter is set to decide what course should now be taken with Rome since the unexpected modifications of June 13th reveal that we can not agree and by all appearances Rome has said no more further discussions.

    While others have prayer intentions for this upcoming chapter, I have only one...that the door to Rome be closed for good until Rome comes back to the Faith and that the smoke of satan which entered our little Society because this door was opened, begone from our midst.

    Having relations with Rome at this point and time is likened to having relations with one possessed. Which is why this was never going to work without the consecration.  One might see the consecration as a sort of exorcism from Heaven.

    Our once calm, peaceful albeit dysfunctional at times little sspx has been rocked to its core and has come exceedingly close to being destroyed because of such relations.

    We need to get back to the real business at hand, the salvation of our own souls and those of others, the proper worship of God, and the teaching of the Truths of the Catholic Faith without any threat of modernism creeping in our halls.


    I am sorry but your post, while true in its concern to get back to the salvation of souls, doesn't sit well with me.

    You say that Bishop Fellay has not signed an accord. Ok, let's assume that is true. Next, you say that he will not. Now that doesn't quite make sense. If that were true, why would those against the accord be punished, and these punishments are not only not over, but escalating. Why were the Dominicans and Franciscans punished for not agreeing with an accord, if Bishop Fellay had no intention of signing one? It would seem that he would say, "you were right. Rome tried to deceive us.". But he is not saying that at all. Much more likely is it that he will try to convince the chastened General Chapter that an accord, though not perfect, is the future.

    Again, the punishments or expulsions from the Society have not stopped, and in fact, things are getting worse. Your prediction doesn't make any sense.


    Offline Ethelred

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1222
    • Reputation: +2267/-0
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #3 on: June 26, 2012, 05:33:38 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0

  • Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 26 2012, 12:08 GMT

    That he is ticked off is clear. The reason the Pope changed the game plan is not necessarily so clear. There are several possibilities, among which is that Rome wants the deal to be temporarily side tracked in order for Bishop Fellay to be able to get rid of the opposition. The Photo Op of the reunion would then be so much nicer and relaxed. There is also the possibility that this new one could not be approved without the extinction of the opposition at the General Chapter. It is another scenario of cleaning the house.

    I find it hard to believe that Bishop Fellay had no idea that there would be opposition in those parts that always were opposed, for years and years. That was no surprise. If he was surprised, then he needs to step down because he is dangerously out of touch with the reality of things.


    Offline Ethelred

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1222
    • Reputation: +2267/-0
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #4 on: June 26, 2012, 05:35:07 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0

  • Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 26 2012, 12:42 GMT

    Quote from: Dawn Marie @ Jun 26 2012, 12:17 GMT

    Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 25 2012, 07:08 GMT

    The reason the Pope changed the game plan is not necessarily so clear. There are several possibilities, among which is that Rome wants the deal to be temporarily side tracked in order for Bishop Fellay to be able to get rid of the opposition.

    How does that make sense?

    Rome wants the whole pie not a slice and the opposition makes up most of the percentage of the SSPX.


    I will try to address your objections. It is of course fruitless to argue about what exactly is going to happen because I doubt either of us knows for sure. So, in a way, you are free to think as you like on this. I would point out, though:

    Rome certainly knew of an opposition. I know for sure that this is the case, because I knew people intimately connected with Ecclesia Dei. They certainly have been aware of this opposition. Perhaps they thought it would disappear in the refulgence of Bishop Fellay, but I doubt it. They are politicians, after all. Now, being "ticked off" is the mark of surprise. People only get angry like this if they are surprised at the obstacle in their path. If you are not surprised but are expecting it, you are not ticked off. You say he was "ticked off" at the change in Rome caused by the opposition. He should have been aware that Rome desires lots of hugs, and signs of togetherness, and not grumpy oysters. I don't buy, however, that Rome was surprised at the opposition to Bishop Fellay. They have had their eye on the opposition in the Society for years.

    Now why the change? To force a too credulous Bishop Fellay to be good and swallow his medicine when the change sprang? They knew he had been doing all the rosary crusades precisely to open the people to acceptance. After all, Our Lady was in back of it all! Except she wasn't; at least in the way that he thought. So he has invested years in preparation and then, surprise- Rome changed the game plan.

    Now why would Rome, who has always known about the non-agreement part of the SSPX suddenly change? Did it change in fact? Benedict XVI has split Tradition. It is not, however, split in two. Rome has succeeded in winning over the majority, not the minority. All are worried about Bishop Fellay's grace of state- a grace denied by the Pope who says that the Society has no mission in the Church. So no grace of state there (if you think the Pope is good and a friend of Tradition). If we think of the grace of State, we must realize that the Pope has the greatest on earth. And yet, up to now that didn't really move many in the Society!

    No, there is not the beginning of peace in the Society. I am afraid that the battle is just beginning, even if Bishop Fellay crushes the opposition and imposes illegal sanctions on the dissidents such as Avrille and Morgon. No, he is after something. Or he knows something that requires the opposition to be removed. Fasten your seat belts.



    Offline Ethelred

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1222
    • Reputation: +2267/-0
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #5 on: June 26, 2012, 05:37:57 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • And now the best one (and it's related to this thread: SSPX sellout to New-Rome -> World War 3)


    Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 26 2012, 01:17 GMT

    Quote from: Marie-Elisabeth @ Jun 26 2012, 01:03 GMT

    Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 25 2012, 07:42 GMT
    After all, Our Lady was in back of it all! Except she wasn't; at least in the way that he thought.

    Father, can you please expound on what you mean here?

    Thank you.


    Alright. These rosary crusades were all ordered to things opposed to the reunion with the Holy See in a canonical fashion. There was the crusade to free the Old Rite. The result, it was partially freed as long as one was approved by Rome to say it, and that one admitted that the two rites were not really two rites at all, but one, and that no priest could in principle refuse to say the "ordinary form". This docuмent undermines the entire objection of Tradition. The New Rite is invalid in law since it does not the teaching of the Church as manifested in the Council of Trent on the nature of the Mass, among other things, and thus destroys the faith of the people. This was a time bomb, not a miracle.

    Secondly, there was the crusade to do away with the supposed excommunications, excommunications that were never valid and thus null. The Pope lifted excommunications from the four bishops. There was no hint they were null. They were valid because as the Pope explained, he had to lift them since the Society no longer denied the papal primacy. The only problem was that that was never denied. Thus we have valid excommunications lifted. No, they were null, not lifted. Strike two.

    Third rosary crusade of the consecration of Russia. It hasn't happened and will not until the Pope actually believes in Fatima. No consecration and yet the spectre of a Roman approval with no agreement on doctrine. Not an answer to anything in that direction.

    But Our Lady never wastes rosaries. She will answer, but it will not be in this way. I fear a chastisement from God. The chalice is overflowing. The pope will leave Rome over the dead bodies of his cardinals. The answer will come, but to pretend that Our Lady is behind these deceits from Rome is only filling the chalice to overflowing. The recent punishments from Menzingen show that Tradition is now persecuted. There is a new hermeneutic of Archbishop Lefebvre, a new Society. It is nothing like the one I was ordained in.


    Offline Ethelred

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1222
    • Reputation: +2267/-0
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #6 on: June 26, 2012, 05:58:06 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • P.S.
    Quote from: Ethelred
    Four most excellents posts by Fr. Domenico [..]
    He's been ordained as a priest by Archbishop Lefebvre

    Sorry, this I don't know for sure. In his last quoted sentence he just writes that he's been ordained in Archbishop Lefebvre's society.

    Offline PAT317

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 900
    • Reputation: +776/-114
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #7 on: June 26, 2012, 06:38:13 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Ethelred
    P.S.
    Quote from: Ethelred
    Four most excellents posts by Fr. Domenico [..]
    He's been ordained as a priest by Archbishop Lefebvre

    Sorry, this I don't know for sure. In his last quoted sentence he just writes that he's been ordained in Archbishop Lefebvre's society.


    He was ordained in Winona in 1996, if I remember right.  


    Offline SeanJohnson

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 15064
    • Reputation: +9980/-3161
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #8 on: June 26, 2012, 06:49:47 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Ethelred

    Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 26 2012, 12:42 GMT

    Quote from: Dawn Marie @ Jun 26 2012, 12:17 GMT

    Quote from: Fr. Domenico @ Jun 25 2012, 07:08 GMT

    The reason the Pope changed the game plan is not necessarily so clear. There are several possibilities, among which is that Rome wants the deal to be temporarily side tracked in order for Bishop Fellay to be able to get rid of the opposition.

    How does that make sense?

    Rome wants the whole pie not a slice and the opposition makes up most of the percentage of the SSPX.


    I will try to address your objections. It is of course fruitless to argue about what exactly is going to happen because I doubt either of us knows for sure. So, in a way, you are free to think as you like on this. I would point out, though:

    Rome certainly knew of an opposition. I know for sure that this is the case, because I knew people intimately connected with Ecclesia Dei. They certainly have been aware of this opposition. Perhaps they thought it would disappear in the refulgence of Bishop Fellay, but I doubt it. They are politicians, after all. Now, being "ticked off" is the mark of surprise. People only get angry like this if they are surprised at the obstacle in their path. If you are not surprised but are expecting it, you are not ticked off. You say he was "ticked off" at the change in Rome caused by the opposition. He should have been aware that Rome desires lots of hugs, and signs of togetherness, and not grumpy oysters. I don't buy, however, that Rome was surprised at the opposition to Bishop Fellay. They have had their eye on the opposition in the Society for years.

    Now why the change? To force a too credulous Bishop Fellay to be good and swallow his medicine when the change sprang? They knew he had been doing all the rosary crusades precisely to open the people to acceptance. After all, Our Lady was in back of it all! Except she wasn't; at least in the way that he thought. So he has invested years in preparation and then, surprise- Rome changed the game plan.

    Now why would Rome, who has always known about the non-agreement part of the SSPX suddenly change? Did it change in fact? Benedict XVI has split Tradition. It is not, however, split in two. Rome has succeeded in winning over the majority, not the minority. All are worried about Bishop Fellay's grace of state- a grace denied by the Pope who says that the Society has no mission in the Church. So no grace of state there (if you think the Pope is good and a friend of Tradition). If we think of the grace of State, we must realize that the Pope has the greatest on earth. And yet, up to now that didn't really move many in the Society!

    No, there is not the beginning of peace in the Society. I am afraid that the battle is just beginning, even if Bishop Fellay crushes the opposition and imposes illegal sanctions on the dissidents such as Avrille and Morgon. No, he is after something. Or he knows something that requires the opposition to be removed. Fasten your seat belts.



       No grace of state according to the Pope.

       That is an excellent observation!

       So much for the appeal to authority on that score.
       
       However:

       "No, he is after something. Or he knows something that requires the opposition to be removed. Fasten your seat belts."

       That is not an encouraging thought.
    Rom 5: 20 - "But where sin increased, grace abounded all the more."

    Offline SeanJohnson

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 15064
    • Reputation: +9980/-3161
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #9 on: June 26, 2012, 06:54:08 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Ethelred
    P.S.
    Quote from: Ethelred
    Four most excellents posts by Fr. Domenico [..]
    He's been ordained as a priest by Archbishop Lefebvre

    Sorry, this I don't know for sure. In his last quoted sentence he just writes that he's been ordained in Archbishop Lefebvre's society.


       It is true.

       I know his real name, his history, and met him once in the late 1990's after he had left the SSPX.

       More than this, I will not say.

       What is important here are his words, not his pedigree.

       And I find very little to argue with in them.
    Rom 5: 20 - "But where sin increased, grace abounded all the more."

    Offline Wessex

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1311
    • Reputation: +1953/-361
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #10 on: June 26, 2012, 02:03:20 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Well, the potential opposition has been weakened, turning the General Chapter into a foregone conclusion with so many Menzingen yes-men, district superiors and seminary appointees praising the achievement of a triumphant Bp. Fellay. What opposition there is will have evaporated before the members assemble because they know the bishop will have his way as was seen at Albano. And this time he will warn them of schism, excommunication and expulsion if they do not obey. I wonder how many will refuse to capitulate.


    Offline AntiFellayism

    • Jr. Member
    • **
    • Posts: 233
    • Reputation: +799/-0
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #11 on: June 26, 2012, 02:10:41 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Jiu-Jitsu ???


    It's more like Jєω-Jitsu !!!

    Non Habemus Papam

    Offline JPaul

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3832
    • Reputation: +3722/-293
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #12 on: June 26, 2012, 03:51:26 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: AntiFellayism
    Jiu-Jitsu ???


    It's more like Jєω-Jitsu !!!




    Looks like Krah Lum style!

    Offline Neil Obstat

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 18177
    • Reputation: +8276/-692
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #13 on: June 26, 2012, 07:10:25 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Clint
    Is the Vatican using
    Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX?
    By John Vennari

    (from: http://www.cfnews.org/page10/page40/page40.html)



    Your link doesn't work because you need a space before the close-parenthesis:


    (from: http://www.cfnews.org/page10/page40/page40.html )
    .--. .-.-.- ... .-.-.- ..-. --- .-. - .... . -.- .. -. --. -.. --- -- --..-- - .... . .--. --- .-- . .-. .- -. -.. -....- -....- .--- ..- ... - -.- .. -.. -.. .. -. --. .-.-.

    Offline Neil Obstat

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 18177
    • Reputation: +8276/-692
    • Gender: Male
    Is the Vatican using Jiu-Jitsu on the SSPX? By John Vennari
    « Reply #14 on: June 26, 2012, 08:25:21 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: John Vennari
    ...As noted last month, Cardinal Koch from the Vatican already stated publicly that all Catholics – SSPX included – are bound to accept the Council. Abraham Foxman, from the Anti-Defamation League, issued a May 31 press release criticizing Cardinal Brandmuller who suggested that Nostre Aetate, Vatican II’s Decree on the Jєωs, is not a binding docuмent, and praising Cardinal Koch for his claim that Catholics are bound to accept all of the Council, Nostre Aetate included...


    Cardinal Brandmuller dares to pronounce the truth, that Nostre Aetate is not a
    binding docuмent (and he could equally have added that nothing in Vatican II is
    binding on Catholics, because John XXIII promised that it would not be binding
    on Catholics and all the Council fathers repeated that refrain for the duration)
    and who steps up to scold him about it, but the one and only Abraham Foxman,
    an ingrate and apostate. He gets paid for his press-releases.

    So, when I hear CathInfo pundits claim that Vatican II was binding on Catholics,
    I'll be sure to remind them that good ol' Abe Foxman would be proud of them.
    .--. .-.-.- ... .-.-.- ..-. --- .-. - .... . -.- .. -. --. -.. --- -- --..-- - .... . .--. --- .-- . .-. .- -. -.. -....- -....- .--- ..- ... - -.- .. -.. -.. .. -. --. .-.-.