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Author Topic: Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)  (Read 1695 times)

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Offline Neil Obstat

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Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
« on: June 11, 2013, 05:14:37 PM »
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    Take a deep breath first........... Modernism revisited!  
    Get ready to be TAKEN for an old-fashioned RIDE
    Courtesy of neo-SSPX via DICI



    Source





    Is there a “neo-modernist Rome”?

    7-06-2013  
    Filed under Docuмents



    The Courrier de Rome no. 365 (May 2013) published the French translation of an interview Fr. Jean-Michel Gleize gave to the U.S. district’s magazine, The Angelus. The interview allowed Fr. Gleize, professor of ecclesiology at the Seminary St. Pius X in Econe, to clarify some points of his study, “Can one speak of the ‘conciliar Church’?”, which was published in the Courrier de Rome no. 363 (February 2013); extracts were published in DICI no. 273 (12/04/13).

    The Angelus:  Father, you recently offered an explanation saying that the expression “Conciliar Church” does not signify an institution distinct from the Catholic Church, but rather a “tendency” within it.  (See the February 2013 issue of Le Courrier de Rome, cited in part by DICI.)  Wouldn’t the logical consequence of this theory be then that the Traditionalist movement should rejoin the official structure of the Church, so as to fight, from within, the conciliar “tendency” and thus to bring about the triumph of Tradition?

    Fr. Gleize:  I ask you in turn:  what do you mean by “official structure”?  Logically, this expression makes a distinction with some other structure that would be non-official:  where is it, in your view?  For my part, it seems to me that there is the Church and there is her visible structure;  and in the Church’s structure there is the good spirit and the bad spirit, the latter having taken hold of the minds of the leaders and wreaking havoc under the pretext of government by the hierarchy.  If there is an official structure to which we do not belong and which we should rejoin, then either it is the visible hierarchy of the Catholic Church and we are schismatics, and as such outside the visible Church;  or else it is a visible hierarchy other than that of the Catholic Church and we are the Catholic Church inasmuch as it is distinct from the conciliar Church;  but then where is our pope?  Is our pope the Bishop of Rome and who is the Bishop of Rome in our Tradition?

    The Angelus:  We often hear the authorities of the Society say that it is necessary to “help the Catholic Church reclaim her Tradition”.  Don’t you think that this sort of statement could leave the faithful confused?  For the Catholic Church could not exist without her Tradition;  she would no longer be the Catholic Church.

    Fr. Gleize:  If you consider the Church figuratively as a person, then your question makes sense.  But the Church is not a person like you or I;  she is a society, and then things are not that simple.  “To help the Church reclaim her Tradition” is an expression in which the whole is taken for the part, that is, those men of the Church who are infected by the bad spirit.  This figure of speech is legitimate and a person of good will does not misinterpret it.  In the past, the popes have indeed spoken about “reforming the Church”.  Now the Church as such does not need to be reformed.  Therefore the popes meant not the Church per se but certain persons in the Church.

    The Angelus:  But Father, do you really think that we can talk about a “tendency” in order to describe the modernism that is wreaking havoc in the Church, since the liberal and Masonic ideas of Vatican II are so to speak institutionalized by the reforms affecting all aspects of the life of the Church:  liturgy, catechism, ritual, Bible, ecclesiastical tribunals, higher education, Magisterium, and above all, canon law?

    Fr. Gleize:  You were right to say “so to speak….”  This is indeed evidence (at least unconscious) that here again things are not that simple.  Do not forget, in any case, that I am not the first to speak about tendencies to describe the current situation of the Church, occupied by modernism.  Recall the 1974 Declaration, which Abp. Lefebvre wanted to make the Charter of the Society:  Abp. Lefebvre speaks precisely about a “Rome with a neo-Modernist, neo-Protestant tendency, which clearly manifested itself in the Second Vatican Council and after the Council in all the reforms that resulted from it”.  Abp. Lefebvre does not mean that there are two Romes or two Churches diametrically opposed to one another, as two mystical bodies and two societies would be.  He means that there is Rome and the Church, the one Mystical Body of Christ, of which the visible head is the Pope, Bishop of Rome and Vicar of Christ.  But there are also bad tendencies that have been introduced into this Church, because of the false ideas that are wreaking havoc in the minds of those who are in power in Rome.  Incidentally this is the argument repeated in the recent February issue of Le Courrier de Rome.  Yes, the reforms are bad;  but the result of them is to instill these tendencies (which remain at the status of tendency) into the things that are reformed:  thus we have a new Mass, new sacraments, a new Magisterium, a new canon law.  And therefore a new Church also.  But these expressions mean to point out the corruption that is wreaking havoc within the Church, not another distinct, separate Church.  For example, in the examination that took place on January 11-12, 1979, in response to the questions posed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Abp. Lefebvre spoke about the new Mass as follows:  “This rite in itself does not profess the Catholic faith as clearly as the old Ordo missae and consequently it may promote heresy. [...]  What is astonishing is that an Ordo missae that smacks of Protestantism and therefore favens haeresim [is promoting heresy] could be promulgated by the Roman Curia.”[1]  You will note that all his words are carefully weighed:  “not … as clearly as”;  “may promote”;  “smacks of Protestantism”;  “favens, promoting”.  These are the words of a wise man, the words of a man who pays attention to what he says.  Abp. Lefebvre also said:  “I never denied that these Masses said faithfully according to the Novus Ordo were valid;  nor did I ever say that they were heretical or blasphemous.”[2]  Careful, therefore!  Let us be firm, but let us not be simplistic.  The bad tendencies become more or less encrusted on the life of the Church, yet we cannot say that there are always and everywhere new institutions completely foreign to the Church.  In all the examples that you mention, it is a question of innovations devised by men of the Church.  But the power that they employed (quite abusively) to impose those novelties is one thing, and the visible hierarchy to which they belong is another.  The liberal and Masonic ideas of Vatican II have been “institutionalized”, if you want to use that term, but let us reflect on what we mean by that formula:  precisely these are new ideas, which are at the outset of new tendencies.  Ideas have enormous consequences, but they are subtly inoculated in people’s minds, they are not an institution, as an entire separate Church can be.  Because otherwise, everybody would see it and everybody would say it, don’t you think?  How can we explain the fact that many people, whom we can certainly suppose are nevertheless somewhat thoughtful and well-meaning, continue to think that the Church remains the Church, even though disorder prevails in it extensively.

    The Angelus:  No doubt, but these tendencies are not Catholic!  They cause people to lose the faith and separate them from the Church.  We are not the ones who left the Catholic Church;  they are, even though they succeeded in taking command of the official structure.  We are therefore confronting a structure, an institution different from the Catholic Church.  If that were not the case, we would be members of it!

    Fr. Gleize:  If I follow your logic to the end, I must conclude that the conciliar Church exists therefore as a schismatic sect, formally different from the Catholic Church.  Therefore:  all its members are materially at least schismatic, including all those who have rejoined it;  they are outside the Church;  one cannot give them the sacraments until they have publicly recanted;  the conciliar popes are anti-popes;  if we are the Catholic Church either we have no pope (and then where is our visible character?), or else we have one (and then who is it and is he the Bishop of Rome?).

    The Angelus:  As for the place of the Pope in all this, we certainly must admit that there is a mystery here, a mystery of iniquity.

    Fr. Gleize:  No doubt, but a mystery is a truth that surpasses reason;  that the Church should be habitually deprived of her head is an absurdity and contrary to the promises of indefectibility.  One of the reasons that the founder of the Society of Saint Pius X could rely on to reject the sedevacantist hypothesis was that “the matter of the visibility of the Church is too essential to its existence for God to be able to do without it for decades;  the reasoning of those who assert the non-existence of the pope places the Church in an insoluble situation.”[3]  Actually, your reasoning is more or less equivalent to sedevacantism.  This is nothing new;  but it is an old error that was already condemned by the founder of the Society of Saint Pius X.  Pardon me if I disappoint you, but I will not run the risk of trying to be wiser than Solomon!  …  The forty years of Abp. Lefebvre’s episcopate matter, if not in the sight of men, at least in the sight of God.  Abp. Lefebvre was a great man, a great bishop, because he was a man of the Church.

    The Angelus: Thank you, Father Gleize.

    [1] “Mgr Lefebvre et le Saint-Office,” Itinéraires 233 (mai 1979):  146-147.

    [2] Abp. Lefebvre, Conferences in Ecône on December 2 and January 10, 1983.

    [3] Abp. Lefebvre, Conference in Ecône, October 5, 1978.

     

    (Sources : The Angelus – DICI#276 June 7, 2013)
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    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #1 on: June 11, 2013, 05:18:48 PM »
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    Get ready for the DELUGE.  

    Once you unplug the hole in the dike, you're in for a real problem.

    This is just the beginning.  

    It's going to get a LOT worse.  



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    Offline Enoc

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #2 on: June 11, 2013, 07:21:23 PM »
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  • The solution of Father Calderon to this question is the answer to Fr. Geize. The key is to realize the fact that the Pope is the Head of 2 religions. The Head of the Catholic Church as the Vicar of Christ, but he is also the head of the new religion of VAT II, which should be called “the religion of man”. He has the authority of the Vicar of Christ, but in practice he is not using that authority, he does not want to use that authority. The Pope is only practicing, supporting and propagating the new religion. The error of Fr. Geize is to consider the material heretic as being outside the Church. Not, he is outside the Church until he becomes “formal” heretic. To become formal heretic one needs to receive first several admonitions from a lawful authority of the Catholic Church. If one persists in his errors, and if he is fully aware of the consequences of such a persistent actitude, only then he becomes formal heretic. The Pope, being the highest authority of the Church cannot receive such lawful admonitions. Many bishops do not receive such admonitions and remain material heretics, but inside the Church.
    VIVA CRISTO REY!

    Offline parentsfortruth

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #3 on: June 11, 2013, 07:34:48 PM »
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  • The one thing in common with all three of those SSPX things in that packet...

    "We are not sede vacantists..."

    "We are not sede vacantists..."

    "We are not sede vacantists..."


    <insert zombie gif smiley here.... if there was one, I don't remember how to do that anymore.>
    Matthew 5:37

    But let your speech be yea, yea: no, no: and that which is over and above these, is of evil.

    My Avatar is Fr. Hector Bolduc. He was a faithful parish priest in De Pere, WI,

    Offline Telesphorus

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #4 on: June 11, 2013, 07:43:11 PM »
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  • They are obfuscators.  Who can untangle that nonsense?

    They do not speak the same way as the Archbishop did.

    That is obvious.


    Offline tmw89

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #5 on: June 11, 2013, 07:44:32 PM »
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  • Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    For my part, it seems to me that there is the Church and there is her visible structure;  and in the Church’s structure there is the good spirit and the bad spirit, the latter having taken hold of the minds of the leaders and wreaking havoc under the pretext of government by the hierarchy.


    As far as I've gotten... and already this priest spouts something which at best sounds inane and at worst sounds proximate to heresy.
    "The 'promise to respect' as Church law the New Code of Canon Law is to respect a number of supposed laws directly contrary to Church doctrine." --Bishop Williamson

    Offline tmw89

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #6 on: June 11, 2013, 08:31:21 PM »
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  • Finished it.  Here's my take.

    The only way to describe this paragraph is "cognitive dissonance":

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize

    You were right to say “so to speak….”  This is indeed evidence (at least unconscious) that here again things are not that simple.  Do not forget, in any case, that I am not the first to speak about tendencies to describe the current situation of the Church, occupied by modernism.  Recall the 1974 Declaration, which Abp. Lefebvre wanted to make the Charter of the Society:  Abp. Lefebvre speaks precisely about a “Rome with a neo-Modernist, neo-Protestant tendency, which clearly manifested itself in the Second Vatican Council and after the Council in all the reforms that resulted from it”.  Abp. Lefebvre does not mean that there are two Romes or two Churches diametrically opposed to one another, as two mystical bodies and two societies would be.  He means that there is Rome and the Church, the one Mystical Body of Christ, of which the visible head is the Pope, Bishop of Rome and Vicar of Christ.  But there are also bad tendencies that have been introduced into this Church, because of the false ideas that are wreaking havoc in the minds of those who are in power in Rome.  Incidentally this is the argument repeated in the recent February issue of Le Courrier de Rome.  Yes, the reforms are bad;  but the result of them is to instill these tendencies (which remain at the status of tendency) into the things that are reformed:  thus we have a new Mass, new sacraments, a new Magisterium, a new canon law.  And therefore a new Church also.  But these expressions mean to point out the corruption that is wreaking havoc within the Church, not another distinct, separate Church.  For example, in the examination that took place on January 11-12, 1979, in response to the questions posed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Abp. Lefebvre spoke about the new Mass as follows:  “This rite in itself does not profess the Catholic faith as clearly as the old Ordo missae and consequently it may promote heresy. [...]  What is astonishing is that an Ordo missae that smacks of Protestantism and therefore favens haeresim [is promoting heresy] could be promulgated by the Roman Curia.”[1]  You will note that all his words are carefully weighed:  “not … as clearly as”;  “may promote”;  “smacks of Protestantism”;  “favens, promoting”.  These are the words of a wise man, the words of a man who pays attention to what he says.  Abp. Lefebvre also said:  “I never denied that these Masses said faithfully according to the Novus Ordo were valid;  nor did I ever say that they were heretical or blasphemous.”[2]  Careful, therefore!  Let us be firm, but let us not be simplistic.  The bad tendencies become more or less encrusted on the life of the Church, yet we cannot say that there are always and everywhere new institutions completely foreign to the Church.  In all the examples that you mention, it is a question of innovations devised by men of the Church.  But the power that they employed (quite abusively) to impose those novelties is one thing, and the visible hierarchy to which they belong is another.  The liberal and Masonic ideas of Vatican II have been “institutionalized”, if you want to use that term, but let us reflect on what we mean by that formula:  precisely these are new ideas, which are at the outset of new tendencies.  Ideas have enormous consequences, but they are subtly inoculated in people’s minds, they are not an institution, as an entire separate Church can be.  Because otherwise, everybody would see it and everybody would say it, don’t you think?  How can we explain the fact that many people, whom we can certainly suppose are nevertheless somewhat thoughtful and well-meaning, continue to think that the Church remains the Church, even though disorder prevails in it extensively.


    Now let's look at the rest:


    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
     If I follow your logic to the end, I must conclude that the conciliar Church exists therefore as a schismatic sect, formally different from the Catholic Church.


    Ding, ding, ding!

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    Therefore:  all its members are materially at least schismatic, including all those who have rejoined it;


    Oh, reductio ad absurdum... we meet again.

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
     they are outside the Church;  one cannot give them the sacraments until they have publicly recanted;  


    A lot of these are "depends on" kinds of issues, although it should go without saying that there are Catholics within the strictures of the NO (even though it is becoming progressively harder to maintain Catholicity within that sect...)

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    the conciliar popes are anti-popes;  


    This is probably the case, although holding the contrary opinion (in itself) doesn't affect the state of one's soul!

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    if we are the Catholic Church either we have no pope (and then where is our visible character?),


    Father might want to tell us where the visible character of the Church has gone 250+ times in the course of our history...

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    or else we have one (and then who is it and is he the Bishop of Rome?).


    I have recently found myself persuaded that a man without valid sacramental orders can attain the papacy - however, the election to the See of Rome of a man who is a pertinacious heretic is automatically null and void.

    Anyhoo... now it gets really interesting:

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    that the Church should be habitually deprived of her head is an absurdity and contrary to the promises of indefectibility.  


    Never heard of Fr. O'Reilly, I see...  some recommended reading:  http://www.lulu.com/shop/father-edmund-oreilly-sj/the-relations-of-the-church-to-society/paperback/product-6241953.html

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    One of the reasons that the founder of the Society of Saint Pius X could rely on to reject the sedevacantist hypothesis was that “the matter of the visibility of the Church is too essential to its existence for God to be able to do without it for decades;  the reasoning of those who assert the non-existence of the pope places the Church in an insoluble situation.”[3]  


    The visibility issue is probably one of the better criticisms of the theory.  Nevertheless, there will always be a way to elect a pope.

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    Actually, your reasoning is more or less equivalent to sedevacantism.  This is nothing new;  but it is an old error that was already condemned by the founder of the Society of Saint Pius X.  


    Yep, it's the boogeyman, alright.

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    Pardon me if I disappoint you, but I will not run the risk of trying to be wiser than Solomon!


    Of course not!   :rolleyes:

    (besides, +Fellay does a fine enough job of that!)

    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    The forty years of Abp. Lefebvre’s episcopate matter, if not in the sight of men, at least in the sight of God.  Abp. Lefebvre was a great man, a great bishop, because he was a man of the Church.


    The one thing Fr. Gleize got right!  Now, to figure out how he arrived at a correct conclusion after... all that...!
    "The 'promise to respect' as Church law the New Code of Canon Law is to respect a number of supposed laws directly contrary to Church doctrine." --Bishop Williamson

    Offline Mithrandylan

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #7 on: June 11, 2013, 08:37:13 PM »
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  • Tmw, I don't have enough thumbs to give you!

    Also, readers may note: the answer to the question of the article (Can one speak of the Conciliar Church?) is most aptly described as 'blah' to which we will translate into English as 'no.'
    "Be kind; do not seek the malicious satisfaction of having discovered an additional enemy to the Church... And, above all, be scrupulously truthful. To all, friends and foes alike, give that serious attention which does not misrepresent any opinion, does not distort any statement, does not mutilate any quotation. We need not fear to serve the cause of Christ less efficiently by putting on His spirit". (Vermeersch, 1913).


    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #8 on: June 11, 2013, 11:21:25 PM »
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  • Quote from: Telesphorus
    They are obfuscators.  Who can untangle that nonsense?

    They do not speak the same way as the Archbishop did.

    That is obvious.



    I find your comment interesting, Tele, in light of the introductory paragraph
    which says this article is supposed to be an explanation of another article
    that (after looking at it I concur) is even MORE 'tangled' or, if you will,
    'nonsense'.    

    In part, it says:
    Quote

     The interview allowed Fr. Gleize, professor of ecclesiology at the Seminary St. Pius X in Econe, to clarify some points of his study, “Can one speak of the ‘conciliar Church’?”, which was published in the Courrier de Rome no. 363 (February 2013)



    One obfuscated tangle of gibberish is being explained by another
    tangled web woven for what purpose one can only guess!  Doesn't this
    go a LONG WAY to substantiate the principle that the superiors form the
    subjects?  After all, Fr. Gleise is professor of ecclesiology at Econe, and
    if you follow up the chain, guess who is his ultimate superior -?  The one
    who spins yarns of tangled gibberish and then later comes back to
    "clarify" it with more obfuscated conundrums, that's who.  The superior
    is doing a great job of (mal)forming his subjects.

    We must have a moment of silence to muster pity for the Econe
    seminarians... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
    ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
    ...Thank you.


    (Can you imagine the graduating class will be all like these two guys???)




    And furtheremore, Mithrandylan apparently took a peek at the "study"
    called, "Can one speak of the 'conciliar Church'?" -and had this to say:

    Quote from: Mithrandylan

    ...
    Also, readers may note: the answer to the question of the article (Can one speak of the Conciliar Church?) is most aptly described as 'blah' to which we will translate into English as 'no.'





    And Mithrandylan, regarding, "Tmw, I don't have enough thumbs to
    give you!"
    -- one positive outcome of that is, at least they can't say
    about you that, "you're all thumbs."




    Finally, regarding this (thanks, tmw89, for taking a stab at the 'thing'):

    Quote from: tmw89

    ...
    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    Pardon me if I disappoint you, but I will not run the risk of trying to be wiser than Solomon!


    Of course not!   :rolleyes:

    (besides, +Fellay does a fine enough job of that!)




    I can't resist ----------- Fr. Gleize doesn't want to run the risk of getting
    caught trying to be wiser than the guy who does a fine enough job of
    trying to be wiser than Solomon, is what.                 HAHAHAHAHAHAHA  



    Quote
    Quote from: Fr. Gleize
    The forty years of Abp. Lefebvre’s episcopate matter, if not in the sight of men, at least in the sight of God.  Abp. Lefebvre was a great man, a great bishop, because he was a man of the Church.


    The one thing Fr. Gleize got right!  Now, to figure out how he arrived at a correct conclusion after... all that...!



    My initial reaction is that the proper conclusion is a sort of Frankenstein's
    monser head stitched on to the body of the 'work' in such a way so as
    to pretend the body and therefore the whole is legitimate.  

    After all, with Modernism, appearances are everything.  If one can
    leap to the conclusion and have no problem with that, then the rest
    can get shoveled into the back of the truck like manure and who's
    going to be the wiser?  

    HIGH --- oh!   :cowboy:





    N.B.  next time get a bed liner first, 'cause then you kin use the truck
    for a night out.





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    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #9 on: June 11, 2013, 11:38:14 PM »
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  • .

    King Louis XV of France is credited with saying,


    “Après moi, le déluge.”


    ..if we aren't right in the middle of it, perhaps this is the last straw?  


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    Offline parentsfortruth

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #10 on: June 12, 2013, 12:03:18 AM »
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  • We're in for it. When we were warned that there would come a time when the perpetual sacrifice would end, I think we're coming perilously close to that.
    Matthew 5:37

    But let your speech be yea, yea: no, no: and that which is over and above these, is of evil.

    My Avatar is Fr. Hector Bolduc. He was a faithful parish priest in De Pere, WI,


    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Is there a neo-modernist Rome? (seriously, folks)
    « Reply #11 on: June 13, 2013, 06:42:05 PM »
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  • .


    I just came from reading some junk at IA, which is a task in itself,
    but maybe it's good to do from time to time because then it's a
    bit more of a relief to come back to sanity.  

    Once you're committed to a padded cell like IA you can't escape,
    and you don't have any relief, so this is nice.

    Anyway, it hit me:

    This piece of (*) by Fr. Gleize is a lot like the recent work of Fr.
    Themann at Winona, and his CDs that say, "Resistance to what?"

    So, it's like they'd really like to say, "Resistance?  I don't see any
    resistance!" But they can't do that, so they pick the next target
    level one step down: "Resistance to what?"

    Similarly, Fr. Gleize doesn't bother to go one step down.  He goes
    straight for the jugular vein:  He denies (by implication) the
    existence of the neo-Modernist Rome, by offering a long-winded
    pile of nonsense that has a title which does all the work for him,
    by asking, effectively,


    Is There Any Such Thing As

    A Neo-Modernist Rome, Or,

    Is It Just A Figment Of The

    Over-Active Imagination Of

    The So-Called Resistance?





    This is a product of Kantian sophistry, by which, when you can't
    manage to cope with an intelligent argument, you simply resort
    to the intellectually dishonest denial of the existence of the object
    at hand.  

    Examples:

    You're standing on the beach with one of these loonies, and you
    say, "Isn't that a beautiful sunset?"  And he replies, "Sunset?  What
    sunset?  I don't see any sunset."  

    Or, you're walking down a moonlit lane at night and you tell him,
    "That full moon sure is impressive."  And his reply is, "Moon?  What
    moon?  I don't see any moon."  

    How do you have a conversation with someone like that?  

    I tried to have one in a banquet hall that had a huge crystal
    chandelier in the middle of the room hanging from the domed
    ceiling.  He took the opportunity to use that as a device, to make
    his point, by saying that it was brighter in here a while ago and
    now it's not so bright -- what's going on?  And I turned to look
    at the chandelier, saying, "They just used the dimmer switch and
    reduced the voltage to the chandelier up there."  He replied,
    "Chandelier?  What Chandelier?  I don't see any chandelier."  



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