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Protestantism, Modernism, Atheism
Crisis Magazine ^ | November 28, 2017 | Julia Meloni

Posted on 11/28/2017 12:09:34 PM PST by ebb tide

“The reality of the apostasy of faith in our time rightly and profoundly frightens us,” said Cardinal Burke in honor of Fatima’s centenary.

In 1903, Pope St. Pius X declared himself “terrified” by humanity’s self-destructive apostasy from God: “For behold they that go far from Thee shall perish” (Ps. 72:27). How much more “daunting,” said Cardinal Burke, is today’s “widespread apostasy.”

In 1910, St. Pius X condemned the movement for a “One-World Church” without dogmas, hierarchy, or “curb for the passions”—a church which, “under the pretext of freedom,” would impose “legalized cunning and force.” How much more, said Cardinal Burke, do today’s “movements for a single government of the world” and “certain movements with the Church herself” disregard sin and salvation?

In Pascendi, St. Pius X named the trajectory toward the “annihilation of all religion”: “The first step … was taken by Protestantism; the second … by [the heresy of] Modernism; the next will plunge headlong into atheism.”

So let us, said Cardinal Burke, heed Fatima’s call for prayer, penance, and reparation. Let us be “agents” of the triumph of Mary’s Immaculate Heart.

A few weeks after that speech, the Vatican announced its shining tribute to the Protestant revolution: a golden stamp with Luther and Melanchthon at the foot of the cross, triumphantly supplanting the Blessed Virgin and St. John.

Bishop Athanasius Schneider has asked how the Vatican can call Luther a “witness to the gospel” when he “called the Mass … a blasphemy” and “the papacy an invention of Satan.” The signatories of the filial correction have expressed “wonderment and sorrow” at a statue of Luther in the Vatican—and documented the “affinity” between “Luther’s ideas on law, justification, and marriage” and Pope Francis’s statements.

At a 2016 joint “commemoration” of the Protestant revolution, Pope Francis expressed “joy” for its myriad “gifts.” He and pro-abortion Lutherans with female clergy jointly declared that “what unites us is greater than what divides us.” Together they “raise[d]” their “voices” against “violence.”   They prayed for the conversion of those who exploit the earth. They declared the “goal” of receiving the Eucharist “at one table” to express their “full unity.”

In Martin Luther: An Ecumenical Perspective, Cardinal Kasper confirms that the excommunicated, apostate monk is now a “common church father,” a new St. Francis of Assisi. This prophet of the “new evangelization” was “forced” into calling the pope the Antichrist after his “call for repentance was not heard.” But Kasper finds ecumenical hope in Luther’s “statement that he would…kiss the feet of a pope who allows and acknowledges his gospel.”

Kasper says Pope Francis’s Evangelii Gaudium, “without mentioning him by name,” makes Luther’s concerns “stand in the center.”

So it’s Luther’s “gospel of grace and mercy” behind, apparently, the high disdain for “self-absorbed promethean neopelagianis[ts]” plagued by a “soundness of doctrine” that’s “narcissistic and authoritarian” (EG 94).

So it’s Luther—the bizarre protagonist of “ecumenical unity”—behind the demand for a “conversion of the papacy” that gives “genuine doctrinal authority” to episcopal conferences (EG 32). Sandro Magister says the pope is already creating a “federation of national Churches endowed with extensive autonomy” through liturgical decentralization.

So it’s Luther behind the demand to “accept the unruly freedom of the word, which accomplishes what it wills in ways that surpass our…ways of thinking” (EG 22). Kasper says Luther’s faith in the “self-implementation of the word of God” gave him a heroic “openness to the future.”

Ultimately, Kasper’s Luther—a prophet of “openness” to futurity, a “Catholic reformer” waiting for a sympathetic pope—emerges as a symbolic father for Modernism’s struggle to change the Church from within. Modernism falsely claims that God evolves with history—making truth utterly mutable. So Kasper the Modernist says dogmas can be “stupid” and Church structures can spring from “ideology” and denying the Eucharist to adulterers because of “one phrase” from Christ is “ideological,” too.

Kasper baldly calls the “changeless” God an “offense to man”:

One must deny him for man’s sake, because he claims for himself the dignity and honor that belong by right to man….

We must resist this God … also for God’s sake. He is not the true God at all, but rather a wretched idol. For a God … who is not himself history is a finite God. If we call such a being God, then for the sake of the Absolute we must become absolute atheists. Such a God springs from a rigid worldview; he is the guarantor of the status quo and the enemy of the new.

A shocking ultimatum from the man hailed as “the pope’s theologian”: either embrace a mutable God who’s not an “enemy of the new”—or profess “absolute,” unflinching, hardcore atheism.

Kasper says the Church must be led by a “spirit” that “is not primarily the third divine person.” That ominous “spirit,” says Thomas Stark, is apparently some Hegelian agent of creation’s self-perfection. Pope Francis, against all the “sourpusses” (EG 85), describes our “final cause” as “the utopian future” (EG 222). Because God wants us to be “happy” in this world, it’s “no longer possible to claim that religion … exists only to prepare souls for heaven” (EG 182).

But Christ said, “In the world you shall have distress” (Jn. 16:33). The 1907 dystopian novel The Lord of the World hauntingly imagines the travails of history’s last days, when humanity has heeded Kasper’s call to “resist” God with absolute atheism if necessary. By this point, “Protestantism is dead,” for men “recognize at last that a supernatural religion involves an absolute authority.” Those with “any supernatural belief left” are Catholic—persecuted by a world professing “no God but man, no priest but the politician.”

More and more clergy apostatize. Man “has learned his own divinity.” Yet Fr. Percy Franklin still adores the Eucharistic Lord, still believes that “the reconciling of a soul to God” is greater than the reconciling of nations. He secretly hears a dying woman’s confession before the “real priests”—the euthanizers—come.

Her daughter-in-law, Mabel, scoffs that the new atheism has perfected Catholicism:

Do you not understand that all which Jesus Christ promised has come true, though in another way? The reign of God has really begun; but we know now who God is. You said just now you wanted the forgiveness of Sins; well, you have that; we all have it, because there is no such thing as sin. There is only Crime.

And then Communion. You used to believe that that made you a partaker of God; well, we are all partakers of God, because we are all human beings.

Mabel and the rapt multitudes ritually worship Man. God was a “hideous nightmare.” Their spirits swoon before a politician promising “the universal brotherhood of man.”

That “savior of the world” is the Antichrist. All must deny God or die.

For history, like the novel itself, ends not with rapturous utopia but with tribulation, apostasy, martyrdoms, and “God’s triumph over the revolt of evil [in] the form of the Last Judgment” (CCC 677). In the throes of his own tribulation, Fr. Franklin calls us to cling to the faith and those refuges of old:

The mass, prayer, the rosary. These first and last. The world denies their power: it is on their power that Christians must throw all their weight.



TOPICS: Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: francischurch; oneworldchurch
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To: aMorePerfectUnion

**Commanded by Christ in Matthew 28:18-20**

First fulfillment: Acts 2:38-41

Commanded by Christ in Mark 16:15,16

First fulfillment: Acts 2:38-41

Commanded by Christ in Luke 24:47 (preach repentance and remission of sins in His name, among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem)

First fulfillment: Acts 2:38-41 (in Jerusalem)

Commanded by Christ in John 20:23 (THEY were commanded to remit sins)

First fulfillment: Acts 2:38-41


201 posted on 11/29/2017 3:43:03 AM PST by Zuriel (Acts 2:38,39....Do you believe it?)
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To: ebb tide
I'll stick with the Bible

Well, that's a refreshing change.

202 posted on 11/29/2017 3:43:46 AM PST by RegulatorCountry
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To: ebb tide
Luther was the first cherry-picker.

Don't know much about his-tory...

Seems like I recall something about a big conflab in Rome where greatly learned men pored over a vast amount of writings; trying to determine just which ones should be included into this compendium they were assembling.

203 posted on 11/29/2017 3:50:51 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: ebb tide; Luircin
I guess you just don't get it.

We confess to God. God forgives.

1 John 1:7-10 But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin. If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.

Simple. Way too simple for a Catholic to grasp apparently.

204 posted on 11/29/2017 3:54:15 AM PST by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: Zuriel; ealgeone

And that brass serpent had to be destroyed when the people started bowing down to and worshiping it.


205 posted on 11/29/2017 3:56:13 AM PST by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: ealgeone

In other words, you can’t make an argument. Everyone could already see that but thanks for confirming it.

Peter and the Apostles baptized 3,000 in one day. The Jews didn’t do it. The Roman soldiers didn’t do it. Peter and the Apostles did. Flounder some more now. It’s all you can do.


206 posted on 11/29/2017 3:57:27 AM PST by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: Mark17

207 posted on 11/29/2017 3:58:54 AM PST by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: vladimir998; ealgeone

The text does not say who did the baptizing. The IMPLICATION would be Peter and the apostles, but the text is not that specific.

So it’s an assumption that Peter is responsible for their baptism.


208 posted on 11/29/2017 4:06:20 AM PST by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: vladimir998
In other words, you can’t make an argument. Everyone could already see that but thanks for confirming it.

Peter and the Apostles baptized 3,000 in one day. The Jews didn’t do it. The Roman soldiers didn’t do it. Peter and the Apostles did. Flounder some more now. It’s all you can do.

Recall, you first said, in your post of 107, "And yet he [Peter] then baptized them."

Then you changed it to,"On Pentecost Peter and the Apostles baptized 3,000 people. In one day. Have you forgotten that?"

I noted, per Vlad's Rules of Internet Debate, that's not what the text says.

But then made clear what I believe happened as noted below.

Vlad's Rule #5...omit what others have posted or twist it in an attempt to show them wrong.

But I digress. I do believe Peter and the disciples did baptized them and maybe with some help from the other believers. Who else was there to baptize them? 124 posted on 11/28/2017, 9:53:57 PM by ealgeone [ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 121 | View Replies | Report Abuse]

Well, you've now committed a mortal sin per Roman Catholicism. You've borne false witness. You did it intentionally. You are aware of it.

"Mortal sin is sin whose object is grave matter and which is also committed with full knowledge and deliberate consent."

I clearly said I believe Peter and the disciples did baptize the people at Pentecost.

For whatever reason, (well, VLID #5 and #6), you've chosen to ignore that.

Roman Catholicism teaches you've gotta get down to see the priest to ask for forgiveness. At this point in your life you've lost Heaven.

Fortunately, Christianity teaches something different...all of our sins are forgiven (Col 2:13-14).

209 posted on 11/29/2017 4:13:44 AM PST by ealgeone
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To: aMorePerfectUnion


210 posted on 11/29/2017 4:26:38 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: ealgeone
Rise up, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, invoking his name.
Douay-Rheims

The text says 'and wash'.

It does NOT say 'which washes'


I got forgiven LONG before I got cleaned up!

211 posted on 11/29/2017 4:30:22 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: ealgeone

I’ll tell you.
I don’t know...

https://youtu.be/7V2lxFWBqfI


212 posted on 11/29/2017 4:36:58 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Elsie
Bravo. I would say this deserves a Limerick. 😁
213 posted on 11/29/2017 4:38:44 AM PST by Mark17 (Genesis chapter 1 verse 1. In the beginning GOD....And the rest, as they say, is HIS-story)
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To: Zuriel
I guarantee that they didn’t sprinkle either.

https://youtu.be/C4PuRpCeC5E

214 posted on 11/29/2017 4:42:16 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: vladimir998
In any case you prove the Church is right.

Keep flingin' it on the wall.

Some of it has GOT to stick!

 

 
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vatican/esp_vatican29.htm
 
 

215 posted on 11/29/2017 4:48:08 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: ebb tide
and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained.

HAs your chosen church retained any lately?


216 posted on 11/29/2017 4:49:25 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: ebb tide
I just quoted the apostle John.

So; you like John; eh?

Then try reading some of Jesus' words that he recorded:

 

John 6:28-29

Then they asked him, “What must we do to do the works God requires?”

Jesus answered, “The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent.”


217 posted on 11/29/2017 4:52:21 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Luircin
What if you’ve committed sins you can’t remember?

It's been a LONG time since I was THAT drunk!

218 posted on 11/29/2017 4:53:21 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: vladimir998
So why are you seemingly desperately clinging to this...

Call no man father

219 posted on 11/29/2017 4:54:32 AM PST by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: boatbums

You can tell the Roman Catholic talking points that keep getting recycled. Next we’ll hear about the discredited account of 30k denominations.....or has the number increased?


220 posted on 11/29/2017 4:55:54 AM PST by ealgeone
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