I’m a Catholic media professional who wasn’t invited to this meeting. For the record, I am an attorney (sole practitioner) who has represented a significant number of lay Catholic broadcasting apostolates before the FCC; my first such client came to me in 1996.
I am a traditional Catholic; I pray for the restoration of the traditional Mass, faith and sacraments.
I also have the right to call out Bishops and priests who engage in heresy and false practice. The 4th Century great St. Athanasius, who fought the Arian Heresy, one said that the floor of hell is paved with the skulls of bad bishops. It is a matter of Christian charity to insist that our leaders bear true faith and allegiance to sacred scripture and sacred tradition.
Bp. Barron, to name one example, fell into the heresy that the late Fr. Richard McBrien of unhappy memory taught, that Mary was not a virgin and that Jesus Christ had biological brothers and sisters.
Here in Washington, we had the spectacle of Abp. Wilton Gregory allowing Nancy Pelosi to speak from the pulpit in St. Matthew’s Cathedral and supporting the Marxist, anti-Catholic “Black Lives Matter” movement.
Interestingly, Vatican II called for greater lay participation in the affairs of the Church. Well, Bp. Barron, you can’t have it both ways. It is the laity who sees the novus ordo church for what it is, and who demands something a heck of a lot better. We want our traditional Mass back—the Mass which has been described as the most beautiful thing this side of heaven.
I invite you to take a look at classic venues of Roman Catholic worship such as Chartres cathedral in France or St. John Lateran in Rome, and then look at places such as the new “Rog Mahal” cathedral (also called the Taj Mahony) in Los Angeles. The magnificent vs. the banal. This is a good metaphor for what the modernists have done to the Mass, faith and sacrraments post-Vatican II.
Thank-you for that information on Bishop Barron. I was unaware of it until now.
The Rog Mahal is at the corner of Grand and Temple, but it is neither.