Hi Blogger Insiders,
In the glorious history of the Holy Catholic Church, there have been many sainted popes. According to historical records, there were only two popes in the first five hundred years (33 AD to 530 AD) of Catholicism that failed to become saints. The popes of the Holy Roman Church were indeed very holy in the beginning. In contrast to this, there have been only two sainted popes in about the last five hundred years.
In the glorious history of the Holy Catholic Church, there have been many sainted popes. According to historical records, there were only two popes in the first five hundred years (33 AD to 530 AD) of Catholicism that failed to become saints. The popes of the Holy Roman Church were indeed very holy in the beginning. In contrast to this, there have been only two sainted popes in about the last five hundred years.
Now the modernist clergy that control the Vatican expect us to believe that every pope since Vatican II are saints? I don't buy it for a second. I'll never swallow it. How could any of the popes since Vatican II be saints in Heaven? The modern(ist) popes (popes since about 1960) have overseen the most precipitous decline in Catholic belief and practice in the history of the Catholic Church.
The legacy of the modernist popes include the pedophilia scandals, the Vatican Bank scandals, the pink palaces, the illicit alteration of the liturgy, the persecution of Catholics attending the traditional Mass, the emptying of the pews, the suppressing of Our Lady's Third Secret of Fatima, the silencing of Sister Lucia dos Santos, the elimination of the Oath Against Modernism, the elimination of the Index of Forbidden Books, the proliferation of ambiguous documents and statements, the failure to discipline wayward cardinals, bishops, monsignors, priests, nuns, and theologians, and the permanent closures of countless churches, monasteries, chapels, nunneries, convents, seminaries, and schools.
Add to this list false ecumenism, religious indifferentism, useless dialogue, unholy pacts (i.e. Vatican-Metz agreement), and the spectacle that was Assisi I, II, and III, and you have an understanding that the legacy of the modern popes is anything but saintly. Also, Our Lady asked for the Consecration of Russia to Her Immaculate Heart and they (the popes) couldn't even do this one simple thing.
The modernist popes, along with the evil communist and masonic infiltrators, have consigned the Church to a pathetic weakness. Catholics used to walk tall. Benedict XVI tried in some measure to restore Catholic holiness. To his eternal credit, at least by giving Catholics the non-negotiable right to the Tridentine Latin Mass, he gave Catholics a fighting chance to help restore all things in Christ.
This brings us to Pope (don't call me Pope) Francis. Bishop of Rome Jorge has shown his disdain for tradition and for anything even remotely traditional. Jorge has continued with zeal in the modernist destruction of the Catholic Church. He has put himself on the path to become the worst pope (if he is not already there) in the history of the Catholic Church. He has been called (among other names) a Marxist/Peronist, a masonic anti-pope, the beast of Buenos Aires, and even the False Prophet of the Apocalypse. Unless Jorge has a conversion similar to that of Blessed Pius IX, there is reason to be concerned for his soul and for the integrity of the Holy Mother Church. Pray much for the Church and for the Holy Father (whoever he is).
As it stands, Jorge will be the one in charge to canonize Pope John XXIII and Pope John Paul II. It must be said that the purpose of canonizing the modernist popes is to canonize the Vatican II revolution. This is their crowning moment. The canonizations have nothing to do with the actual sanctity (or lack thereof) of the candidates. The fact that they are modernist post-Vatican II popes is the only criteria necessary for their "sainthood".
In the past, it took the most holiest of popes (generally) hundreds of years to be declared a Saint of the Holy Catholic Church. Today, they make saints at the drop of a papal hat.
In the past, it took the most holiest of popes (generally) hundreds of years to be declared a Saint of the Holy Catholic Church. Today, they make saints at the drop of a papal hat.
Be saintly, fellow Bloggers.
God Bless you,
In Christ the King,
Michael the Lionheart