Catholic Info
Traditional Catholic Faith => The Sacred: Catholic Liturgy, Chant, Prayers => Topic started by: SimpleMan on May 03, 2022, 08:51:44 PM
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I just looked at the newest "Official Catholic Directory" featured on the TRADITIO website, and they list a Father David Nix (actually, they say "Presb." as they deny the validity of Novus Ordo orders) as celebrating the TLM at Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Jacksonville FL.
Does anyone know if this is the same Father David Nix who is listed on the Archdiocese of Denver website as a "diocesan hermit"? Perhaps on loan to the St Augustine diocese? The St Augustine diocesan website doesn't list him as a priest of their diocese.
(There really wasn't a category for this kind of post, so I placed it in the closest thing.)
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I thought he was in Colorado.
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I thought he was in Colorado.
So did I. That's what I'm saying. Did he somehow get transferred to Jacksonville, or could it be another Father David Nix who is not on the St Augustine diocese website list of priests for some reason?
It could also be old information, and maybe the Colorado Fr Nix was in Florida at one time. I don't think TRADITIO updates that list except upon request.
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It could also be old information, and maybe the Colorado Fr Nix was in Florida at one time. I don't think TRADITIO updates that list except upon request.
I haven't found anything online that puts him there after 2018.
https://padreperegrino.org/2018/03/plep/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3How-B_yvs&list=UU1b0OkBzjii527ydagV8MWg&index=8
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He used to be in Jacksonville, but moved back to Colorado several years ago.
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We listen to his podcasts. Very educational and spiritual. We have been listening to the Catechism of ST Pope Pius X.
He recently talked about his Catholic pro life friends who were recently raided by the FBI. Pray for them.
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He used to be in Jacksonville, but moved back to Colorado several years ago.
Mystery solved. TRADITIO just hasn't updated their information.
Yes, I know, the Official Catholic Directory is supposed to be a separate entity, and reading TRADITIO is my guilty pleasure --- their online resources are excellent, though the commentaries are highly biased, and sometimes omit crucial information to slant the narrative towards their arguments --- but the casual reader would not make this hair-splitting distinction.