Posted on 01/30/2017 10:07:42 PM PST by ebb tide
The Sovereign Military Order of the Knights of Malta, whose almost millennium-long history includes its critical role in the defeat of Islam at the Battle of Lepanto, has submitted like a whimpering puppy to a naked abuse of power it had every right to resist, and did resist for a few weeks. The effective demise of the Orders sovereignty is a shocking and disheartening demonstration of the extent to which the Church is now being governed from the top in the manner of a banana republic, wherein the only law is the will of the leader.
First, as Edward Pentin reports, the head of the Order, Matthew Festing, was summoned to a secret meeting with Francis on the strict instruction not to let anyone know about the audience a modus operandi that has been used frequently during this pontificate Then he not only demanded Festings resignation, but also ordered him to write a letter of resignation on the spot lest there be any second thoughts after Festing had left the room and was free of immediate coercion. Worse, in a move indicating that Cardinal Burkes head was the next to roll, Francis demanded that Festing include language in his resignation letter, also written under coercion, implicating the influence of Cardinal Burke in the dismissal of Albrecht Freiherr von Boeselager as Grand Chancellor of the Order on account of Boeselagers involvement in the Orders charitable distribution of condoms to prostitutes in the Southeast Asian Republic of Myanmar (formerly Burma).
Second, Francis simply declared null and void all acts taken by the Orders Sovereign Council since December 6, thus effectively reinstating the condom Knight and overriding the legislative activity of a sovereign nation with its own passport and diplomatic relations with more than a hundred countries, including the Vatican City State itself. The Orders Sovereign Council has since made a vain display of sovereign action by a pro forma vote to accept Festings forced resignation, the annulment of its acts since December 6 and the immediate reinstatement of Boeselager as if Francis would have been deterred by the Orders refusal to ratify his destruction of its sovereignty.
Third, Francis has further declared that he will saddle the Order with an apostolic delegate who will oversee an unspecified spiritual renewal of the Order and will have powers that he [Francis] will define in the act of appointing him a blatant usurpation of the role of Cardinal Burke, amounting to his de facto removal as the Orders spiritual patron.
Fourth, in a mockery of the Orders sovereignty, now in ruins, Francis will permit the Sovereign Council to elect a new Grand Master to replace the forcibly removed Festing, supposedly in recognition of the Orders sovereign status which he has just utterly disregarded! Making the mockery complete, the Order issued a statement declaring that the Holy Fathers decisions were all carefully taken with regard to and respect for the Order, with a determination to strengthen its sovereignty. And this from the same Order that had at first resisted Francis investigation into its sovereign affairs, issuing a statement that the investigation was legally irrelevant and that Boeselagers dismissal was purely a matter of internal governance over which the Pope has no jurisdiction. And, no doubt, Francis considers himself entitled to remove any future Grand Master or other official of the Order who displeases him or to annul any of its legislative acts if he deems it expedient.
So, the same Order whose sovereign status Francis has brutally trampled on by removing its head and annulling its duly enacted legislation now thanks him for strengthening its sovereignty. Is this a joke? If only it were. Chalk up this sad affair to another triumph for legal nominalism in the Church since Vatican II, according to which concepts like sovereignty, renewal and reform indeed the very concept of Catholicism have no meaning beyond what the will of the ruler decrees on a given day. And the reign of nominalism in any commonwealth, including the ecclesial commonwealth, can only mean oppression, division and ultimately chaos.
The problem is now so undeniable that even Philip Lawler, who can hardly be accused of radical traditionalism, is compelled to articulate it for his fellow Catholics: The Roman Pontiff should be a focus of unity in the Church. Pope Francis, regrettably, has become a source of division. There are two reasons for this unhappy phenomenon: the Popes autocratic style of governance and the radical nature of the program that he is relentlessly advancing.
I will leave the last word to him.
I will ask you what I asked Falconspeed yesterday (no response):
How can there be two living Popes? Pope Benedict is alive, and he has never fully resigned. Bergoglio is trashing the Catholic Church much like Obama/Soetoro trashed America. Time to speak out at your churches before it is too late.
I agree. Two living Popes is a rough situation. We have to fix it.
Oh, yeah?
For this reason, and well aware of the seriousness of this act, with full freedom I declare that I renounce the ministry of Bishop of Rome, Successor of Saint Peter, entrusted to me by the Cardinals on 19 April 2005, in such a way, that as from 28 February 2013, at 20:00 hours, the See of Rome, the See of Saint Peter, will be vacant and a Conclave to elect the new Supreme Pontiff will have to be convoked by those whose competence it is. Pope Benedict XVI, February 11, 2013.
It’s true that the letter of resignation appears to be unambiguous. But the intention to resign while supposedly retaining some aspects of the “Petrine Ministry,” and to continue being addressed as “Pope” and “Your Holiness,” and dressing like a pope, and living in the Vatican, all these introduce doubt. And doubt on two points: was Benedict in material error about the nature of the Papacy? and was there coercion?
We now have infinitely more knowledge of what an unprincipled thug Bergoglio is than we did four years ago. (And knowledge about the criminal gang who engineered his election and who are now running the Church.)
If this Papacy lasts a few years longer we may have married priests, openly homosexual priests, and ultimately devolution of the priesthood to something like in the Episcopal Church.
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