Vatican II and the popes who enabled it |
Just to be clear, Les Femmes does not question the validity of the Novus Ordo Mass (although we have questioned the validity of certain Masses we've attended in the Novus Ordo form like one in Hampton Roads). What do you think about this, readers?
By David Martin
It is often voiced by
conservatives disheartened by the changes in the Catholic Church that Vatican II
was a good council, but that it was misinterpreted. If these good people were
better informed as to what took place at the Council, they would never say any
such thing. Though Vatican II started with the best resolves, it was hijacked in
the opening session by rebel bishops because the pope had planned the Council
without their advice and against their designs.
We gather that Cardinal Tisserant,
the key draftsman of the 1962 Moscow-Vatican Treaty who presided at the opening
session, was at the center of this coup to usurp the Vatican Council. According
to Jean Guitton, the famous French academic, Tisserant had showed him a painting
of himself and six others, and told him, "This picture is historic, or rather,
symbolic. It shows the meeting we had before the opening of the Council when we
decided to block the first session by refusing to accept the tyrannical rules
laid down by John XXIII." (Vatican II in the Dock, 2003)
At the center of this coup
to overthrow Vatican II were Cardinals Alfrink, Frings, and Liénart of the Rhine
Alliance. Their objective was to gain control of the conciliar drafting
commissions. A crucial vote was to be taken to determine the members of the
commissions when Cardinal Liénart, a suspected Freemason, seized the microphone
during a speech and demanded that the slate of 168 candidates be discarded and
that a new slate of candidates be drawn up. His uncanny gesture was heeded by
the Council and the election was postponed. Liénart's action deflected the
course of the Council and was hailed a victory in the press. The date was
October 13, 1962, the 45th Anniversary of Our Lady’s last apparition at Fatima.
(Fr. Ralph Wiltgen, the Rhine Flows into
the Tiber)
In his February 14, 2013,
address to the clergy of Rome, Pope Benedict XVI brilliantly recounts this coup
d’ etat at Vatican II:
"On the programme for this first day were the elections of the Commissions, and lists of names had been prepared, in what was intended to be an impartial manner, and these lists were put to the vote. But right away the Fathers said: ‘No, we do not simply want to vote for pre-prepared lists. We are the subject.’ Then, it was necessary to postpone the elections, because the Fathers themselves…wanted to prepare the lists themselves. And so it was. Cardinal Liénart of Lille and Cardinal Frings of Cologne had said publicly: no, not this way. We want to make our own lists and elect our own candidates." (Benedict XVI in his address to the clergy of Rome, February 14, 2013)
After illicitly blocking the vote,
this rebellious faction, known as the "Rhine group," resorted to boorish methods
to force-install a number of their own members onto the drafting commissions, so
that overnight nearly sixty percent of the commissions were now chaired by
"suspect theologians" that previously had been restricted under Pius XII. Their
control of the commissions would continue to strengthen, thus paving the way for
the various documents of Vatican II that we know today.
However, the true
documents of Vatican II were the 72 schemata which John XXIII had approved
before the Council. The 72 schemas were held in high esteem by the true thinkers
of the Faith, including Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, who had been appointed to
the Central Preparatory Committee to check the documents for doctrinal purity
before presentation at the Council. According to Lefebvre, the schemas were
worthy and orthodox, and should have been used, but to his great dismay the
Council under the direction of these conciliar pirates rejected John XXIII's
outline. Consider Lefebvre's own words:
Pope John, seeing what had happened,
finally cried out in June 1963 to "Stop the Council," but it was too late. The
enemies of the Faith had captured the key positions of the Council, thus
enabling them to draft perfidious documents for the misguiding of the Church,
i.e. the 16 documents of Vatican II.
Hence the radical changes of today do not reflect a misinterpretation of Vatican II, but a true interpretation as intended by the original architects. This is why we have all the problems today. The few good parts of the documents penned by the few good people were only allowed as conservative cover to sell the documents to the Council fathers. It was more important to Vatican liberals that the documents appeared orthodox than liberal, because the objective of these scoundrels was to secure the signature of Pope Paul VI, without which their plan would never succeed.
"From the very first days, the Council was besieged by the progressive forces. We experienced it, felt it…We had the impression that something abnormal was happening and this impression was rapidly confirmed; fifteen days after the opening session not one of the seventy-two schemas remained. All had been sent back, rejected, thrown into the waste-paper basket…The immense work that had been found accomplished was scrapped and the assembly found itself empty-handed, with nothing ready. What chairman of a board meeting, however small the company, would agree to carry on without an agenda and without documents? Yet that is how the Council commenced." (Archbishop Lefebvre, Open Letter to Confused Catholics, 1986)
Hence the radical changes of today do not reflect a misinterpretation of Vatican II, but a true interpretation as intended by the original architects. This is why we have all the problems today. The few good parts of the documents penned by the few good people were only allowed as conservative cover to sell the documents to the Council fathers. It was more important to Vatican liberals that the documents appeared orthodox than liberal, because the objective of these scoundrels was to secure the signature of Pope Paul VI, without which their plan would never succeed.
Their plan in gist was to revive
the cause of Luther under the pretext of a reform and to merge the Catholic
Church with world religions. Fr. Edward Schillebeeckx, a prominent figure of the
Council, even said: "The accusation of connivance with the Reformation is
therefore not without foundation."
Consider now the vision of
nineteenth century Freemason and excommunicated priest, Canon Roca (1830-1893),
who predicted that "the liturgy of the Roman Church will shortly undergo a
transformation at an ecumenical council" in a move "to deprive the Church of its
supernatural character, to amalgamate it with the world, to interweave the
denominations ecumenically instead of letting them run side by side as separate
confessions, and thus to pave the way for a standard world religion in the
centralized world state."
More than once it has
surfaced that the Blessed Virgin in Her Third Secret at Fatima spoke of "a bad
council and a bad Mass." This was reported by the Fatima Crusader in May 2009 and
again by One Peter Five in May
2016. According to both reports, Cardinal Ratzinger [now Benedict XVI] told his
good friend Fr. Ingo Dollinger in late-summer 2000 that there is still part of
the Fatima Secret that has yet to be released, and that the Secret speaks about
"a bad council and a bad Mass" that was to come in the future. https://onepeterfive.com/cardinal-ratzinger-not-published-whole-third-secret-fatima/
A bad council and a bad
Mass would certainly tie with Canon Roca's prediction that the liturgy "will
shortly undergo a transformation at an ecumenical council." Among the
instructions of this ecumenical Council was the September 26, 1964, Constitution
on the Liturgy, Inter
Oecumenici, which outlined the new ruling for the Mass and sanctuary.
Article 91 reads:
"The main altar should preferably be freestanding, to permit walking around it and celebration facing the people"
How is it that people say
Vatican II was misinterpreted, when its call for "celebration facing the people"
was mandated as the universal norm shortly after the Council? This change, which
was unprecedented in the 2000-year history of the Church, was carefully
calculated to bring about a shift of focus where the emphasis is on the
community, and not on God.
Inter Oecumenici also
called for the "suppression" of the Leonine Prayers after Mass, i.e. the three
Hail Marys, the Salve Regina, and the Prayer to St. Michael (article 48), and
the suppression of these prayers indeed came to pass after the Council.
In keeping with the
conciliar design "to undertake with great care a general restoration of the
liturgy" (21), the document Sacrosanctum Concilium called for
an overall revision of the Mass, wherein archaic "elements" accumulated through
time "are now to be discarded" and "the rites are to be simplified" so that
"active participation by the faithful may be more easily achieved." (Article
50)
This too came to pass with the
implementation of the Novos Ordo Mass, though the new Mass did not enhance any
participation in God, but our alienation from God. "Active participation" as God
sees it is that we be involved with our religion by reverently attending Mass,
going to confession, reading the lives of the saints, and sanctifying our souls
in the fear of God, but what the liberals meant by this is that we should be
busy-body activists by engaging in the liturgical revolution against the Mass
and priesthood.
Some still argue that the Vatican
II documents contain no error but are simply ambiguous in their wording, but
their argument hangs them, because ambiguity is the smoking gun of the devil and
is the clearest evidence that the documents are jinxed. God is never ambiguous,
but is always clear, direct, and juridical, so distorted documents which
'speaketh out of two sides of the mouth' are a dead give-away that God is not
the Author thereof.
The documents are
sometimes very unambiguous. For
instance, the conciliar document Unitatis Redintegratio makes clear
that "The Holy Spirit does not refuse to make use of other religions as a means
for salvation" and even states: "In certain circumstances, such as prayer
services 'for unity' and during ecumenical gatherings, it is allowable, indeed
desirable that Catholics should join in prayer with their separated
brethren."
Because of this and other like
text from the Council, it is not uncommon today for clergy and laity to engage
in interfaith worship against the Church's 2000-year prohibition, so how is it
that concerned Catholics today attribute this ecumenical mingling to a
"misinterpretation of Vatican II?" The Council called for Mass facing the
people, so how is it that the new Mass was implemented against the Council's
designs?
This is a home run. Five Stars. Congratulations!!!
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