The False Peace of Bob Prevost

IN HIS recent reverential visit to the third-largest mosque in the world, Bob Prevost, aka “Pope” Leo XIV, followed in the footsteps of his five Vatican II predecessors in open apostasy, all of whom have scandalously honored Islam as part of their One World, All-Religions-Are-True-and-All-Believers-Are-Super-Nice Religion. Prevost’s visit to a mosque in Algeria on April 13, 2026 came at a time when Muslims continue to engage in violence against professed Christians in Africa, including some 50,000 killed in the last 14 years in Nigeria alone.

Pope Leo XIV [who removed his shoes in accordance with Muslim custom] marked the beginning of his apostolic journey to Africa with a visit to the Grand Mosque of Algiers, where he highlighted the site’s spiritual significance and paused in silent meditation.

Welcomed by the Rector of the Mosque, Mohamed Mamoun al Qasim who offered words of fraternity, the Pope said “I thank you for these reflections and for these important words during this visit, from a place that represents the space that belongs to God, a divine and sacred space, where many people come to pray and to seek the presence of the Most High in their lives.” (Source; emphasis added.)

It was not necessary to visit an actual mosque or bow in prayer in a mosque in order to engage in friendly dialogue with Muslims. There is nothing wrong with friendly discussions with Muslims and in fact charity is owed them. But worshipful prayer in a mosque? No. The Grand Mosque of Algiers is not a space that belongs to God. It is a space that denies God and puts in His place an idol, which is why the Crusades were launched and why true popes had to work to liberate Christians captured, killed, surgically castrated or enslaved by Muslims. According to author Robert Davies, 1.25 million European Christians were captured and enslaved by Muslims from 1500-1800. But all that is of the past. The important thing is what Muslims still believe:

O People of the Scripture! Do not exaggerate in your religion. Say nothing about Allah except the truth: that the Messiah, Jesus, son of Mary, is but a messenger from Allah and His Word which He communicated to Mary, and a spirit from Him. So believe in Allah and His messengers. And do not say “Three.” Enough, it will be better for you. Allah is but One God. Glory to Him. To have a son…To Him belongs whatever is in the heavens and whatever is on the earth…And Allah is sufficient as a protector. (Koran: Surah An-Nisa, 171) [emphasis added]

A quick reminder:

“Whoever denies the Son does not have the Father either.”
“Whoever confesses the Son also has the Father.”

— John, Chapt. 1:2 

And this:

Apostasy

Objection 2. Furthermore, infidelity lies in the intellect. Apostasy, on the other hand, seems to reside more in outward actions or words, and even in the inner will, as we read in Scripture: “A apostate man is worthless; he goes about with a lying mouth; he winks, rubs his feet, and chatters with his fingers; his heart is full of evil, and he always stirs up conflict” (Prov 6:12). Likewise, if someone were to circumcise himself or worship at the tomb of Muhammad, he would be considered an apostate. Therefore, apostasy does not belong directly to infidelity.

— Saint Thomas Aquinas, Theological Summa – Part II-IIae – Question 12

Vatican II’s Declaration Nostra Aetate, nn. 3 set in stone for the future of the Conciliar Church the notion of Islam as worshipping the Christian God: (more…)

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Regina Coeli

Regina Coeli

V/. Regina cæli, lætare; Alleluia.

R/. Quia quem meruisti portare; Alleluia.

V/. Resurrexit sicut dixit; Alleluia.

R/. Ora pro nobis Deum; Alleluia.

V/. Gaude et lætare, Virgo Maria; Alleluia.

R/. Quia surrexit Dominus vere; Alleluia.
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Patience: The Essential Virtue

“[ST.] John Climachus observed that ‘to the spiritual man patience is more essential than food,’ and justly so; for food strengthens the body, and preserves it from weakness, but patience fortifies the soul, and without it no virtue can be firm and solid. But as we are bound to take more care of the soul than of the body, it is evident that we ought to be more solicitous for patience than for food. For, in the words of St. Peter Damian, ‘the man whose patience breaks down may have other virtues, but he will never have their strength and solidity. Patience is concerned in all that we have to resist, in all that we have to deny ourselves, in all that we have to endure, in all that we have to adhere to, and in all that we have to do. This includes all human acts that bear the character of duty or devotedness, whether those acts be purely interior, or come forth into the exterior life and conduct. For wherever patience fails, the act is weak and the work imperfect.

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The Illusion of Sexual Freedom

Lust, Pieter Van Der Heyden; 1558

[T]HE effect of treating sex as only one innocent natural thing [is] that every other innocent natural thing [becomes] soaked and sodden with sex. For sex cannot be admitted to a mere equality among elementary emotions or experiences like eating and sleeping. The moment sex ceases to be a servant it becomes a tyrant. There is something dangerous and disproportionate in its place in human nature, for whatever reason; and it does really need a special purification and dedication. The modern talk about sex being free like any other sense, about the body being beautiful like any tree or flower, is either a description of the Garden of Eden or a piece of thoroughly bad psychology, of which the world grew weary two thousand years ago.”

— G.K. Chesterton, St. Francis of Assisi, Image Books, 1957; p. 29

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Veuillot on Modern Errrors

“HUMAN souls are sick, and sick with a terrible disease: they are tired of the truth and afraid of it! In souls that are still Christian this disease manifests itself in a lack of horror for heresy, in a chronic state of complacency towards error, in a certain fascination for snares, often in a shameful eagerness to let oneself be caught. It is not an entirely modern ailment, for it is rooted in the very heart of man. ‘I love to be caught,’ exclaims St. Augustine. Father Faber speaks of it as the characteristic political physiognomy of our time. The liberal siren conceals her poisonous locks, shows her rosy face, and holds the cross in her hand. She easily lures victims to the brink of the abyss; she seduces the eyes, the reason, the heart. Unless the spirit of obedience guards us, we are taken captive. We must be eternally vigilant, in order to remain the same, in order not to become suddenly different. (more…)

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O Magnum Mysterium

MAN’S days are as grass, as the flower of the field so shall he flourish.

For the spirit shall pass in him, and he shall not be: and he shall know his place no more. 

But the mercy of the Lord is from eternity and unto eternity upon them that fear him: And his justice unto children’s children, 

To such as keep his covenant, And are mindful of his commandments to do them. 

The Lord hath prepared his throne in heaven: and his kingdom shall rule over all. 

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Springtime in a Troubled World

FROM Pope Pius XII’s address to newlyweds on May 7, 1941:

Springtime of nature’s beauty, springtime of Easter joy, springtime of weddings. You are now enjoying this threefold spring; you are reveling in it almost as if the world around you is drawing together everything in your life for you. However, if you interrupt for a moment the sweet converse of your honeymoon and happen to read a paper, you will find in its columns another life and another world: operations of war, immense battles on land, at sea and in the air, but also magnificent examples of generosity towards those who suffer, of dedication, heroism and sacrifice.

In the midst of these dreadful upheavals, dear sons and daughters, you yourselves in a great and beautiful act of Christian faith have not been afraid to establish your new families, well knowing and believing that the unperturbed renewal of spring in the tumult of human events is neither mockery nor jest, nor the cold indifference of blind nature nor an empty fancy of foolish dreamers, but witness and proof to our senses of the reality of life and beauty reborn of that supreme and paternal “love which moves the sun and the stars,” whose abiding care never for an instant deserts the governance of the universe, and whose mercy controls and moderates the turmoil of humankind. Is not your faith really a reliance on the sovereign Hand of God, gentle and strong, watchful, alert, perpetually guiding the events of this world, great and small, sad and joyful? Learn the beautiful and lofty lesson God gives you in the threefold spring which you are living in these days and which confirms your trust.

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Blossom Where You Are

                                  Daniel Garber, Spring Panel

A PRAYER IN SPRING
Robert Frost

OH, give us pleasure in the flowers to-day;
And give us not to think so far away
As the uncertain harvest; keep us here
All simply in the springing of the year.

Oh, give us pleasure in the orchard white,
Like nothing else by day, like ghosts by night;
And make us happy in the happy bees,
The swarm dilating round the perfect trees.

And make us happy in the darting bird
That suddenly above the bees is heard,
The meteor that thrusts in with needle bill,
And off a blossom in mid air stands still.

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The Spiritual Garden of Easter

EASTER is more than a day. It is — or it should be — an entire season, a time of spiritual joy that complements the earthy pleasures of spring.

“The practice for this holy season mainly consists in the spiritual joy which it should produce in every soul that is risen with Jesus. This joy is a foretaste of eternal happiness, and the Christian ought to consider it a duty to keep it up within him, by ardently seeking after that life which is in our divine Head, and by carefully shunning sin which causes death. During the last nine weeks we have mourned for our sins and done penance for them; we have followed Jesus to Calvary; but now, our holy Mother the Church is urgent in bidding us rejoice. She herself has laid aside all sorrow; the voice of her weeping is changed into the song of a delighted Spouse.

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Pope Pius XII vs. Bob Prevost on Sports

RECENT comments made to a group of athletes in Rome offer a striking example of why Bob Prevost (aka “Pope” Leo XIV) is not Catholic, not a member of the Catholic Church and most certainly not a pope. Though his remarks would not offend most listeners today, who in fact would likely find his message appealing, they are devoid of any real supernatural content. Bob delivers a humanistic, pagan message — with no acknowledgement of the dangers of excess or making sports the goal of life —  the sort of thing the president of a secular college might say in a speech before a sports championship.

His speech embodies the spirit of pagan Rome today — focused on the pleasures of warm relationships, lumping all religions into one sugary cake, and glorifying the human god. It is the sterile, religious counterpart to the dehumanizing New World Order.

Compare his remarks with those of Pope Pius XII on the exact same subject. (Warning: The site Novus Ordo Watch should be read with great caution. It promotes illicit “mass centers’, tempting readers to jump from the frying pan, so to speak, into the fire.)

From Pope Pius XII’s commentary in 1945:

Sport is the school of loyalty, of courage, of fortitude, of resolution and universal brotherhood: all natural virtues, these, but which form for the supernatural virtues a sound foundation, and prepare man to carry without weakness the weight of the greatest responsibilities.

Thus conceived, sport is not an end in itself, but a means. As such, it is and must remain subordinated to its end, which consists in the perfect and balanced formation and education of the whole man, for whom sport is an aid in the ready and joyful accomplishment of his duties: be they in his sphere of work, be they in the family. (more…)

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The Mystery of Iniquity

Appearance on Lake Tiberias, , Duccio di Buoninsegna; 1308-11

THE ‘mystery of iniquity’ gradually developed over the centuries cannot be fully consummated while the Papacy remains, but only now that ‘what restrains it is removed.’ During the interregnum, ‘the man of sin will reveal himself’ in his fury against the Church.

“It is a matter of history that the most disastrous periods for the Church have been times when the papal throne was vacant, or when antipopes opposed the legitimate head of the Church. The same will be true in the bad times to come.

“The Church, deprived of its chief pastor, must seek sanctuary in solitude to be guided by God himself during these days of trial.”

— Rev. E. Sylvester Berry, The Apocalypse of St. John, (John W. Winterich (editor), 1921) pp. 124-125. 

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Where Is the Catholic Church today?

                                        St Pancras

CAN the Catholic Church be found in the buildings — the churches, schools, colleges, social services agencies — that go today by the Catholic name and profess allegiance to Rome?

No, the Catholic Church cannot be found today in these buildings, no matter how beautiful or ancient, because they do not profess the Catholic religion, but a syncretistic, modernist faith and all their priests, bishops and popes since Vatican II have lost their offices because of heresy and apostasy. (See the bull issued by Pope Paul IV in 1559, Cum ex apostolatus officio).

Can the Catholic Church be found in churches, such as those run by the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, that offer the Traditional Latin Mass and appear to accept all of Church doctrine while professing allegiance to apostate Rome?

No, the Catholic Church cannot be found in diocesan churches that offer the Traditional Latin Mass because they are in communion with heresy and apostasy and all of their priests are either laymen or clerics who have fallen from office. These alleged clerics profess by the fact of their position a syncretistic creed, not the Catholic faith.

Can the Catholic Church be found in the Society of St. Pius X, which acts in opposition to Rome while at the same time recognizes the authority of the Vatican II hierarchy? (more…)

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Alleluia

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The Certainty of Death and Resurrection

Giovanna Garzoni

“DEATH awaits us; it is daily advancing towards us; we cannot escape its vengeance. The wages of sin is death: in these few words of Scripture, we are taught how death is not only universal, but even necessary; but we have all sinned. This, however, does not make the law less severe; nor can we help seeing a frightful disorder in the violent separation of soul and body, which were united together by God Himself. If we would truly understand death, we must remember that God made man immortal: this will explain the instinctive dread we have of death—a dread which one thing alone can conquer; and that is the spirit of sacrifice. In the death, then, of each one of us there is the handiwork of sin, and consequently a victory won by satan: nay, there would be a humiliation for our Creator Himself, were it not that, by sentencing us to this punishment, He satisfied His justice.

“This is man’s well-merited but terrible condemnation. What can he hope for? Never to die? It would be folly; the sentence is clear, and none may escape. Can he hope that this body, which is to become first a corpse, and then be turned into a mere handful of dust, will one day return to life, and be reunited to the soul for which it was made? But who could bring about the reunion of an immortal substance with one that formerly united with it, but has not seemingly been annihilated? And yet, O man! this is to be thy lot! Thou shalt rise again; that poor body of thine, which is to die, to be buried, forgotten, and humbled, shall be restored to life. Yes, it even now comes forth from the tomb, in the person of our Lord Jesus Christ; our future resurrection is accomplished in His; it is today that we are made as sure of our resurrection as we are of our death. This, too, makes part of our glorious Feast, our Pasch!”

— Dom Prosper Guéranger, Thursday in Easter Week

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God’s Infinite Love for the Weak and the Humble

                                                                 Correggio, Noli Me Tangere

‘GOD is all-powerful and delights in showing himself in that which is weakest; he is infinitely good and glorious in rewarding such as love him. This explains how it was our Jesus gave to Magdalen and her companions the first proofs of his Resurrection, and so promptly consoled them. They were even weaker than the Bethlehem shepherds; they were, therefore, the objects of a higher preference. The Apostles themselves were weaker than the weakest of the earthly powers they were to bring into submission; hence they too were initiated into the mystery of Jesus’ triumph. But Magdalen and her companions had loved their Master even to the Cross and in his tomb, whereas the Apostles had abandoned him; they therefore had a better claim than the Apostles to Jesus’ generosity, and richly did he satisfy the claim.””

— Dom Prosper Guéranger, Thursday in Easter Week

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At the Lake of Tiberias

James Tissot, Life of Christ

 “AFTERWARD Jesus appeared again to his disciples, by the Sea of Tiberias. It happened this way: Simon Peter, Thomas (called Didymus), Nathanael from Cana in Galilee, the sons of Zebedee, and two other disciples were together. ‘I’m going out to fish,’ Simon Peter told them, and they said, ‘We’ll go with you.’ So they went out and got into the boat, but that night they caught nothing.

“‘Early in the morning, Jesus stood on the shore, but the disciples did not realize that it was Jesus.  He called out to them, ‘Friends, haven’t you any fish?’

“‘No,’ they answered. He said, ‘Throw your net on the right side of the boat and you will find some.” When they did, they were unable to haul the net in because of the large number of fish.”

— John 21:1-6

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