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Late Journalist and Senior Editor for the American Spectator George Neumayr Warned: ‘The Clock On Catholic Civilization Is Nearing Midnight’
The Federalist ^ | 01/31/2023 | Carina Benton

Posted on 01/31/2023 9:11:37 AM PST by SeekAndFind

George Neumayr’s tireless attempts to sound the alarm on the corruption rotting the Catholic Church must not be lost in the ether.

Late last week, George Neumayr, author, journalist, and senior editor for the American Spectator became the third high-profile Catholic to die in as many weeks. Neumayr suddenly perished on Thursday, Jan. 19, after contracting malaria in the west African nation of the Ivory Coast, where he was undertaking research for an upcoming project on the Catholic Church in Africa.

The year began on a dismal note, with Pope Benedict XVI’s death on Dec. 31. Two weeks later, the conservative Australian Cardinal George Pell unexpectedly succumbed in Rome after a routine hip operation. But if the loss of Benedict after a decade of frailty and seclusion was deeply upsetting, and if Pell’s sudden death, days after he authored a stern rebuke of the Vatican’s neo-Marxist interpretation of faith and morals, was dismaying, Neumayr’s premature demise was distinctly unsettling.

All three — pope, cardinal, and journalist — have bequeathed a message of urgency, nay emergency, regarding the perilous road the church is treading, a warning that should not be buried with them.

On Friday, Jan. 20, it was reported that Neumayr had died. He had been in Africa since Dec. 26, visiting various parishes in and around Abidjan. He noted that these were conspicuously run down and/or poorly attended, a testimony to both decolonization and the decline of the post-Vatican II church.

Neumayr never publicly disclosed that he had contracted malaria. On Sunday, Jan. 15, he mentioned having been “violently ill” the day before with a form of food poisoning but confirmed that he was feeling better. His last known communication appears to have been at approximately 6:30 a.m., Ivorian time, on Tuesday, Jan. 17. On Wednesday, his colleagues were worried when they uncharacteristically hadn’t heard from him; on Thursday, he was dead.

In the preceding weeks, Neumayr appears to have been genuinely concerned for his life and bantered back and forth on Twitter with another user about getting whacked. When his phone was snatched on the streets of Abidjan by a passing motorcyclist, Neumayr joked that he’d almost cried out: “Are you with the USCCB?” meaning the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Neumayr clearly intended this in jest. He knew he was no favorite among U.S. bishops, owing to his dogged pursuit of the corrupt and the compromised. He was always prepared to name names and get his hands dirty. In 2018, he revealed the location where serial sex abuser, pedophile, and disgraced former cardinal Theodore McCarrick was apparently in hiding after his fall from grace, a cushy mansion allegedly owned by the Archdiocese of Washington, and where auxiliary Bishop Mario Dorsonville was also supposed to be living. When Washington Post journalist Elizabeth Bruenig also repeatedly dropped by, looking for answers, a representative of the Archdiocese of Washington complained to her editor. But with the cat truly out of the bag, McCarrick was hurriedly banished to safer quarters in a distant Kansas friary.

Late last year, Neumayr was giving Bishop Barry Knestout of the Diocese of Richmond, Virginia, a run for his money. In 2018, Knestout, an ally to McCarrick, appointed one Rev. Wayne Ball as pastor of St. Augustine Catholic Parish in Chesterfield, Virginia. According to the Richmond Times Dispatch, in December 2002, while pastor of Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Norfolk, Virginia, Ball pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor sex offense after he was arrested with another Richmond man when they were sprung together in a parked car at a local park. Knestout did not make parishioners aware of this when he appointed Ball.

Neumayr was understandably appalled when the United States Bishops, at their fall general assembly just last November, actually elected Knestout to chair the Committee on the Protection of Children and Young People. Neumayr demanded that Knestout resign or be removed from the position.

Knestout never responded to Neumayr’s repeated requests for comment, and his press secretary similarly stonewalled him. Neumayr eventually turned up at the rectory of the Richmond Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, and Knestout himself answered the door. The prelate still refused to provide any explanation, far less a justification for his scandalous and sneaky appointment of Ball. The next day, Knestout promptly hit back with a letter signed by the diocese business manager, banning Neumayr for life from entering the cathedral.

Ball, too, supposedly took umbrage at Neumayr’s line of questioning and sicced his lawyer on him. The lawyer was apparently John Brownlee, the attorney who represented former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell when he was brought up on 14 counts of public corruption. In fact, during his trial, McDonnell was reportedly rooming with Ball at the rectory of St. Patrick’s Catholic Church in Richmond, Virginia.

But Neumayr’s overarching concern, one he worried was falling on deaf ears, was the role McCarrick may still be playing behind the scenes, despite being squirreled away at a Midwest rehab center for troubled priests, and even while he faces criminal charges. He feared that McCarrick could play a role in choosing the next pope.

McCarrick was always a mover and shaker, a wheeler and dealer, a globetrotter, and a “pope maker.” He enjoyed the ear of successive presidents, including Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and George W. Bush, who once described McCarrick as “my friend” and “a decent, decent man.” Leading up to the 2013 conclave, despite being beyond the age of voting, McCarrick reportedly lobbied for Jorge Bergoglio. He is also likely to have played a crucial role in the hashing out of the disastrous China-Vatican accord.

Whatever the full story behind Neumayr’s apparent whirlwind contraction of and death from malaria, and whatever the reasons he believed he was “tangling with some dangerous forces,” his tireless attempts to sound the alarm on the corruption rotting the Catholic Church must not be lost in the ether.

The legacy of McCarrick is a pestilence. There are still too many prelates afloat who were not only never held to account over their role in covering McCarrick’s tracks but have been elevated to positions of influence and power under Francis’s pontificate. If Christ’s shepherds continue to bury their heads in the sand while “Teddy’s nephews,” as Neumayr called them, defile the church with their anti-Catholic agenda, mislead the faithful, and plot and scheme to determine the next conclave, God have mercy on us all.

Neumayr’s cri de coeur is not so different from the late-Cardinal Pell’s warnings. Pell vehemently denounced Vatican toxicity and the indifference to doctrine, traditional morals, apostolic tradition, and the centrality of God’s word. He called out the “neo-Marxist jargon about exclusion, alienation, identity, marginalization, the voiceless, LGBT as well as the displacement of Christian notions of forgiveness, sin, sacrifice, healing, redemption.”

And then there’s Benedict, whose abrupt resignation in 2013, the reasons for which are still shrouded in controversy and conjecture, paved the way for a pope who mocks his own regnal name by assuming a mission not of rebuilding Christ’s church, as God called the holy St. Francis to do, but of demolishing it.

In a private letter published posthumously, Benedict wrote that “the power of the Antichrist is expanding” and urged for prayer “that the Lord will give us strong shepherds who will defend his church in this hour of need from the power of evil.” In a newly released book, whose publication Benedict planned for after his death, the former pontiff claimed that the priesthood is on the verge of “collapse” and that “in several [Catholic] seminaries, homosexual clubs operate more or less openly.”

It’s hard to think of a way out of this mess. Neumayr worried that “the hand on the clock of Catholic civilization is almost at midnight.” But Jesus tells His apostles in Acts that it is not for us to know the times and moments, which are set by God’s authority. “Do not let evil defeat you; instead, conquer evil with good,” writes St. Paul in Romans, “for the Scripture says, ‘Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.’”

In any case, from Neumayr’s shoulders, these burdens have now happily been lifted. May he rest in eternal peace.



TOPICS: Catholic; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: catholicism; civilization; georgeneumayr
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1 posted on 01/31/2023 9:11:37 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

God rest Mr. Neumayr. May the Holy Spirit inspire a thousand worthy successors to Cardinal Pell and George Neumayr.


2 posted on 01/31/2023 9:18:09 AM PST by Antoninus (Republicans are all honorable men.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Good read. Thanks


3 posted on 01/31/2023 9:28:02 AM PST by Track9 (You are far too inquisitive not to be seduced…)
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To: SeekAndFind
It's still the biggest religion going... 1.313 billion Catholics... And it's not a club, so if you don't like the established doctrine, join the heathens or become a Protestant.

What Catholicism needs is a new Pope... One who is truly Catholic and not a charlatan.

4 posted on 01/31/2023 9:36:02 AM PST by jerod (Nazi's were essentially Socialist in Hugo Boss uniforms... Get over it!)
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To: SeekAndFind; Al Hitan; Fedora; irishjuggler; Jaded; kalee; markomalley; miele man; Mrs. Don-o; ...

Ping


5 posted on 01/31/2023 9:39:51 AM PST by ebb tide
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To: jerod

Faithful Catholics “like” the established doctrines, it is those like the perfidious German bishops, J Martin, and McCarrick who do not.

I feel like the only person suggesting a solution is Ron Dreher—now Orthodox—in his book Live Not by Lies.

The times just seem to get worse every day.


6 posted on 01/31/2023 9:51:28 AM PST by Chicory
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To: jerod

“What Catholicism needs is a new Pope... One who is truly Catholic and not a charlatan.”

And guess what, with all the cardinals that the Marxist pope has nominated, the new pope will be like him.


7 posted on 01/31/2023 10:29:24 AM PST by aquila48 (Do not let them make you "care" ! Guilting you is how thery control you. )
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To: SeekAndFind

May his Memory be Eternal!!!!


8 posted on 01/31/2023 10:31:39 AM PST by Honorary Serb (Kosovo is Serbia! Free Srpska! Abolish ICTY!)
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To: aquila48
What Catholicism needs is a new Pope

IMHO...It also needs to cleans itself of perverted priests and Bishops. With so many perverts in the ranks and in high places, the question is, can it? The requirement of celibacy is a man-made doctrine, which has no basis in scripture. The apostles were married save Paul. Nowhere does Paul require celibacy of those he discipled. Unfortunately, celibacy has offered a cloak for sinful men and women to hide behind. It's way past due to end this unscriptural requirement. To point out that eastern Catholic priests can marry is not enough. All Catholic priests and Bishops should be able to marry if they desire.

9 posted on 01/31/2023 11:10:52 AM PST by JesusIsLord
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To: SeekAndFind

“Whatever the full story behind Neumayr’s apparent whirlwind contraction of and death from malaria, and whatever the reasons he believed he was “tangling with some dangerous forces,” “

I believe that FR Malachi Martin was offed by those forces.


10 posted on 01/31/2023 11:52:49 AM PST by Revel
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To: Revel

Father Kunz as well.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Alfred_Kunz

An impressive priest.


11 posted on 01/31/2023 1:20:37 PM PST by Hieronymus
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To: SeekAndFind

Once marxism infests any organization it is doomed.


12 posted on 01/31/2023 1:29:31 PM PST by Organic Panic (Democrats. Memories as short as Joe Biden's eyes)
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To: JesusIsLord
All Catholic priests and Bishops should be able to marry if they desire.

It’s a common opinion you have there… but one that is very misguided. But you are looking at the wrong question.
Its misguided because you have formed this opinion based on a misunderstanding of the function of the Priesthood-
and probably the FRrequency of clerical/homo news which bombard us daily in such a salient and click-worthy manner.
But all is not lost.

While Catholics would like to say clerical sex abuse has been eradicated, we know it hasn’t.
But it has been put in check somewhat. The spotlight is on the clergy, and they are unfortunately for most, guilty before proven innocent.
The comment that “so-many perverts in high places” is simply ad-hominem with no factual support.
There are over 400,000 priests offering sacrifice and serving the laity in the world.
So yes there will be bad apples… always has been. Just like many other segments of life- even within our families.

The distrust for clergy- innocent or otherwise - is on display everytime a prelate sympathetic to the same-sex issue among those seeking Christ- is categorized and demonized as a homosexual themselves based unfairly on sinful minds.
Now is James Martin a homosexual? Who knows but all the signs are there. And boy does he get the headlines…
Yes, in your defense though, due to the angst against the Church- wheter its current or happened 50-70 years ago- you're gonna hear about it.

The logic of your opinion is flawed as you must assume that those who enter the priesthood-
would rather be married in the first place. Maybe they seek celibacy?
While that could attract more applicants no doubt- would you then have to preclude that single men need not apply?
Would Marriage be mandatorily required then?
Or would clerical mix and match scenario be more appropriate?

Now that’s only looking at it from a cultural perspective, and totally disregards the nature and function of the priesthood-
which I think you don’t fully understand or would comply with.
You probably don’t agree with the in persona Christi nature of the ordained- or value the monastic life that accompanies reverence and contemplation.
These things were certainly born out of scripture which you won’t make any allowance for- but have been part of Christianity since the beginning. Even before... look to the Essenes and the ascetic life of their Priesthood- set apart from cultural norms.

For it is clearly scriptural – from the lips of Christ and his celibate Priesthood:

”…. there are eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. He who is able to receive this, let him receive it.

Christ speaks here as celibacy as a Gift… something to be received- for the sake of Heaven.
To make oneself chaste in this way- has to separate them from the ordinary. With that a greater respect should be shown- if done for Godly purposes and not sexual. That’s is why a Catholic Nun or Monk take this vow, to serve only God in a life service of total submission.
I would guess that you probably are equating a Catholic Priest celebrating The Mass to a non-Catholic person- with some seminary schooling under their belt - preaching the Bible for a living.
Its apples and oranges.
That is not to diminish preaching the Bible in a non-Catholic way, which there are certainly issues on that side of the fence as well.
But the point being they are 2 very different forms of worship.
Marriage would inhibit and disrupt the Catholic Priesthood in many ways… perhaps mostly causing a great unfairness to a wife who would be second place to the Priest’s altar.
Perhaps that is why Christ- or even St. Paul - never married.


13 posted on 01/31/2023 3:03:03 PM PST by MurphsLaw ( "If you do boast, remember it is not you that support the root, but the root that supports you.")
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To: MurphsLaw
Marriage would inhibit and disrupt the Catholic Priesthood in many ways…

Eastern Catholic priests can marry. Eastern (non-Catholic) churches allow their clerics to marry. A Wiki page titled 'Clerical Marriage' is an interesting read. There are Catholic priests & Bishops with children, who are married. It's generally viewed that the Apostles save Paul were married. The fact that Apostles were married and undoubtedly many of their disciples were married is enough to tell me that "required" celibacy is a man-made requirement.

14 posted on 01/31/2023 4:11:32 PM PST by JesusIsLord
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To: JesusIsLord

Eastern Catholic priests cannot marry. Married men may be ordained in the Eastern rite churches.


15 posted on 01/31/2023 5:13:58 PM PST by clockwise
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To: MurphsLaw
FRrequency of clerical/homo news which bombard us daily in such a salient and click-worthy manner.

Perhaps, you preferred that all Catholics stick their heads in the sand and ignore the pink elephant in the Vatican.

16 posted on 01/31/2023 8:10:44 PM PST by ebb tide
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To: JesusIsLord
Yes, there are married Priests. Even Anglican Pastors who convert to the Latin Rite are allowed to be married.
But Priest's life is NOT conducive to a married, and possibly family life.
They take a good of poverty, they own nothing-
they usually live on the Parish grounds on a Rectory- with another Priest(s).
Diocesan Priests are required to move around through transfers.
They barely have enough time to minister to their Parish-
Let alone being committed to a wife and children.
You are presupposing the Catholic Religious life is a "normal" occupation.
It is not.
And statistically, at least 25% of these Priests will eventually get divorced...
Not a good look when performing the Sacramental Rite of Marriage.
There are many more marital situations just too incompatible for the life of a Priest.

The fact that Apostles were married and undoubtedly many of their disciples were married is enough to tell me that "required" celibacy is a man-made requirement

This part is probably not easy for you to see...
But the Priest functions "in the Person of Christ" in his Sacramental capacity, as well in an Apostolic context.
We need to look at Christ's life as a model for the Priesthood...
In the order of Melchezidek. And again, look at the Essene Priesthood.
And yes, some Apostles were married when Christ called them.
Move past that. It's not relevant.
Most men and women were married in the early teens upon reaching puberty.
When Christ arrived on the scene most, if not all, were married.
His theology on celibacy changed all that.
St. Paul in a way mimicked that.

And as Far as you claim that a celibate Priesthood is man- made-
You are 100% correct.
And THAT man's name was Jesus.
His thoughts on Celibacy as service to the Kingdom of God are very scriptural.
You don’t think Jesus had some tough rules?

This closing scripture should shed some light for you
on the priority of marriage and sexual conjugation had when it came to ...the sake of the Kingdom of God...

28 And Peter said, “Lo, we have left our homes and followed you.”
29 And he said to them, “Truly, I say to you,
there is no man who has left house or wife or brothers or parents or children,
for the sake of the kingdom of God,
will be repaid many times
over in this life,
and will have eternal life in the world to come.” "


17 posted on 01/31/2023 9:26:08 PM PST by MurphsLaw ("You need endurance to do the will of God , and receive what HE has Promised." Heb 10:36)
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To: ebb tide
Hey no way man...
I'm in for all the homo outrage I can take...
Always reminds me how much better I am the others..
So at least there's that...


18 posted on 01/31/2023 9:28:47 PM PST by MurphsLaw ("You need endurance to do the will of God , and receive what HE has Promised." Heb 10:36)
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To: SeekAndFind

The RC church is toast. T-O-A-S-T. If you want a church restored, you’ll have to start a new one.


19 posted on 02/01/2023 6:49:50 AM PST by Scarlett156 (My aluminum baseball bat keeps telling me it wants to talk to J3rry S3infeld. )
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To: Scarlett156
If you want a church restored, you’ll have to start a new one.

Seriously, now ask yourself...
Do we really need another church out there?
Cant we just say Joel Osteen was the last prophet - and just call it a day?

I'm thinking Ecclesial overload right about now...


20 posted on 02/01/2023 7:08:38 AM PST by MurphsLaw ("You need endurance to do the will of God , and receive what HE has Promised." Heb 10:36)
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