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Author Topic: Latest Angelus Press Conference  (Read 6188 times)

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Re: Latest Angelus Press Conference
« Reply #20 on: July 06, 2019, 05:12:28 PM »
This video, from 2015, looks like a preview of what Fr Kilcawley is going to say at the conference:
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Not the most masculine specimen, to say the least. I'd have to see how he talks (his voice and hand movements and jokes ) when he is in, say a Novus Ordo "gαy friendly" environment, before I could judge further.   Definitely someone to watch closely before I would allow my family to be exposed to him. 

Re: Latest Angelus Press Conference
« Reply #21 on: July 06, 2019, 06:23:41 PM »

I can't get past his "prayer" in any of the videos before I've had enough and decide it isn't worth it. 


Re: Latest Angelus Press Conference
« Reply #22 on: July 06, 2019, 06:43:50 PM »
those who say, I won't know til I hear, are foolish!  Wasting their time, energy and $$.  That is what that group needs, none of our time, energy or $$$

I hear the same thing with new order.  Until the sky falls, I am staying.  Foolish!

Offline Meg

Re: Latest Angelus Press Conference
« Reply #23 on: July 07, 2019, 07:44:13 AM »
I had the same reaction.  Even his opening prayer reminds me of the way Protestants start their speeches.
It's an emotional Faith for the modernists.  They have to feel loved.  Emotions are so important to them.
Suffering is horrible for them.  I found the whole video mushy and without meaningful advice.

I agree. It seems an emotional approach.

Fr. Kilcawley says in one of the videos that he was raised in a disfunctional family, and that his father was an alcoholic, and his mother died when he was two years old, from cancer. He also says that he lived a sinful life when he was young. I have to imagine that with that background, he never felt loved, and that's why it's the "Jesus loves you" is so important to him. He seems to have the idea that the only answer to ones' "woundedness" is to realize that Jesus loves us. I get that, but it isn't enough. 

I have sympathy for his situation, but at some point, it seems to me, one has to move beyond one's personal suffering (with all of its attending emotional issues) and focus on God - the Holy Trinity. He doesn't appear to address that at all.