Republished: On the Feast of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal

Although not on the General Roman Calendar, today, Friday, November 27, 2020, is the Feast of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal. Although not observed universally on a mandatory basis, this feast is is nevertheless an important one to commemorate as this powerful sacramental is yet another sign of the love that pours out from the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus through the hands of Our Lady, she who is the Mediatrix of All Graces, despite our own ingratitude and infidelities. [This feast is one that, traditionally, had been celebrated solemnly in the Diocese of Brooklyn, and it was within the boundaries of that diocese that I was born on Saturday, November 24, 1951, three days before this feast day that year.]

This reflection was written in 2010 and published in two parts. It was four years ago now that it was combined into one part and revised slightly in a few places.

Work is about done on the next article, although I will need another five or six hours of writing this afternoon into the evening to complete it. A

Thank you.

Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, pray for us.

Saint Catherine Laboure, pray for us.

Saint Catherine of Alexandria: As Rigidly Opposed to Idolatry as Moses Himself

This is a brief reflection for the feast day of Saint Catherine of Alexandria. 

Three other new articles are on the "flight deck." The first of those three articles will be published by Friday or Saturday. The third of the three will be a commentary on the junior varsity statists/globalists/nogoodniks who are being assembled to repopulate the District of Columbia swamp that resist draining in the past four years. As I wrote twelve years ago after the election of Barack Hussein Obama/Barry Soetoro, Chastisement Is A Silver Lining, and we are going to it get it but good this time around. 

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us.

Saint Catherine of Alexandria, pray for us.

Jorge Mario Bergoglio Makes A Mess of Things Again, All to His Utter and Perverse Delight

This commentary is about some of the fallout from the McCarrick Report and Jorge Mario Bergoglio's efforts to whitewash his own role in the protection of predators by seeking to cast Girondist/Menshevik conciliar revolutionaries as the ones who created problems that he is "cleaning up."

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us.

Saint John of the Cross, pray for us.

Saint Chrysogonus, pray for us.

Saint John of the Cross: Model of All Those Who Suffer Unjustly

This reflection on the life of Saint John of the Cross was written for and published in To Live in Light of Eternity, Volume 6, and is being offered to readers of this site for the first time.

Our Lady of he Rosary, pray for us.

Saint John of the Cross, pray for us.

Sant Chrysognus, pray for us.

Republished: Pope Saint Clement Knew That No One Can Disobey A True Pope

This is a republished reflection about Pope Saint Clement that includes the following passage from Dom Prosper Gueranger's The Liturgical Year:

With only one exception, all of the documents which attest Clement's intervention in the affairs of distant churches have perished with time; but the one that remains shows us in full action the monarchical power of the bishop of Rome at that primitive epoch. The church of Corinth was disturbed with intestine quarrels caused by jealously against certain pastors. These divisions, the germ of which had appeared even in St. Paul's time, had destroyed all peace, and were causing scandal to the very pagans. The Corinthians at last felt the necessity of putting an end to a disorder which might be prejudicial to the extension of the Christian faith; and for this purpose it was requisite to seek assistance from outside. The apostle had all departed this life, except St. John, who was still the light of the Church. It was not great distance from Corinth to Ephesus where the apostle resided: yet it was not to Ephesus but to Rome that the church of Corinth turned. Clement examined the case referred to his judgment by that church, and sent to Corinth five commissaries to represent the Apostolic See. They were bearers of a letter, which St. Irenaeus calls potentissimas litteras. It was considered at the time so beautiful and so apostolic, that it was long read in many churches as a sort of continuation of the canonical Scriptures. Its tone is dignified but paternal, according to St. Peter's advice to pastors. There is nothing in it of a domineering spirit; but the grave and solemn language bespeaks the universal pastor, whom none can disobey without disobeying God Himself. These words so solemn and so firm wrought the desired effect: peace was re-established in the church of Corinth, and the messengers of the Roman Pontiff soon brought back the happy news. A century later, St. Dionysius, bishop of Corinth, expressed to Pope St. Soter the gratitude still felt by his flock towards Clement for the service he had rendered. (Dom Prosper Gueranger, O.S.B., The Liturgical Year.)

Dom Prosper Gueranger, O.S.B,, understood that was and can be no such thing as "resistance" to a true and legitimate Successor of Saint Peter.

Work on the next original article should be wrapped up after another four or five hours of writing. However, I will post it late this evening along with a reflection on the life of Saint John of the Cross, on whose feast day I was born in 1951, that made its debut in To Live in Light of Eternity, Volume 6.

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us.

Pope Saint Clement, pray for us.

Republished: Saint Cecilia: Valiant Model of Catholic Fidelity and Purity

This is a very brief, republished reflection on the heroic virtues of Saint Ceclia, whose feast is commemorated today, November 22, 2020, the Twenty-fifth and Last Sunday after Pentecost.

Work continues apace on the next original commentary.

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us.

Saint Cecilia, pray for us.

Republished: On the Feast of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Today is the Feast of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. This is a short reflection on the feast day, which is followed by an appendix including the description of the Presentation of Our Lady as found in The New English Edition of The Mystical City of God.

The next original article for this site should be published on Monday,  November 23, 2020, the Feast of Pope Saint Clement I. Another one will follow in a few days thereafter. 

Sin: More Deadly Than the Coronavirus, part seven has undergone some editing after a few remaining typographical errors had been brought to my attention. Please circulate the commentary widely as so many people are either living in fear now and/or are confused about the vaccines that have been heralded by the president, who believes whatever Big Pharma tells him is true even though its corporate executives mislead the public constantly and then, thanks to a bill signed into law by another "hero" or "secular savior" of the false opposite of the naturalist "right," Ronald Wilson Reagan, on November 14, 1986. Shallow men impressed by "experts" have done a lot of harm in the course of doing what they thought was "good." We need Our Lady's help to see the world clearly through the eyes of the true Faith, and one of the ways to do this is stop being agitated by talk radio and twenty-four hours a day news channels. The saints did not need these things. Why do we?

Finally, please pray for a former student of mine who turns fifty-three years of age today and for a friend of ours on Long Island who turns seventy-two years of age today. Thank you.

Our Lady, Ark of the New Covenant, pray for us.

Saints Joachim and Anne, pray for us.

Republished: Saint Elizabeth of Hungary Suffered at the Hands of Her Own Family

This is a republished reflection on the suffering endured by the very first member of the Third Order of Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, who suffered much at the hands of her family members and even at the hands of the poor whose welfare she provided so generously when her husband, Louis, was the Landgrieve of Thuringia.

Yesterday's original commentary, Sin: More Deadly Than the Coronavirus, part seven, has been revised to include an urgent statement, distributed via email, by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the Chairman and Chief Legal Counsel of Children's Health Defense, about the inherent dangers of the vaccines that been developed at "warp speed" by Big Pharma that change the recipients' genetic structure irreversibily. Kennedy's statement is concise and very readable. Please make sure to read it within yesterday's commentary and to distribute his urgent statement as widely as possible.

I am working on the next commentary, although, reasonably speaking, it might be until Monday, November 23, 2020, the Feast of Pope Saint Clement, before it can be completed and posed.  

As noted yesterday, any and all non tax-deductible financial gifts would be very helpful at this time. Thank you.

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us.

Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, pray for us.

Pope Saint Pontianus, pray for us.

Sin: More Deadly Than the Coronavirus, part seven

The title is self-explanatory as the hour is as late as this commentary is long. 

A commentary about the always continuing follies of conciliarism will appear in a few days. 

In the meantime, however, the need for non-tax-deductible financial gifts continues to be crucial right now. Please consider making such a gift today! (Also see: Donations).

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us.

Saints Peter and Paul, pray for us.

Republished: Saint Josaphat Kuncewicz Did What Conciliarism Forbids

This is a republished reflection on the life and martrydom of Saint Josaphat Kuncewicz, whose feast is celebrated today.

Saint Jospahat Kuncewicz did what conciliarism forbids, namely, seeking the conversion of the heretical and schismatic Orthodox to the Catholic Church, she who is the one and only true Church founded by Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ upon the Rock of Peter, the Pope. 

The current pretender in Rome has carried on the conciliar "tradition" of claiming that the Orthodox churches are simply a branch of "Christianity." This brief reflection refutes that false contention. Indeed, the very life of Saint Jospahat Kuncewicz is a refutation of that false contention.

Although I have been busy writing election-themed commentaries, have started initial work on “Sin: More Deadly Than the Coronavirus, part seven,” and will return to a book project that will comprise perhaps as many as sixteen volumes of selected commentaries about conciliarism from 2006 to 2020, I am not unaware of some of the news in the world of the fake, phony, fraud entity that has been referred to as the counterfeit church of conciliarism dating back to 2006, I am aware of several important developments in the never-never land of conciliarism, starting with the starting with the McCarrick Report.

While I will not be writing about the McCarrick Report for another three weeks or so, I do want to provide the few people who access this site regularly with a link to an article by Mrs. Randy Engel on what was omitted from the McCarrick Report. Please see The “Uncle Teddy” McCarrick Case. An article of my own from around twenty-seven months ago, "Uncle Teddy" McCarrick and the Conciliar Cesspool of Corruption, and one from ten and one-half years ago,  "Canonizing" A Man Who Protected Moral Derelicts, might also be timely for those interested to re-read and review.

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us.

Saint Josaphat Kuncewicz, pray for us.

Recently published articles can be found by scrolling below or going to the Articles Archive page, 2016-2020.

 

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