Rabbi and Schismatic Patriarch to Address Bishops...
Benedict’s Unprecedented
Ecumenical Synod
By John
Vennari
On Sunday October 5,
Pope Benedict XVI will celebrate the opening Mass for the 12th Synod
of Bishops in Rome.
The Synod is marked by a series of “firsts”
all aimed at furthering the novel ecumenism of the Second Vatican Council – an
ecumenism condemned by the Church’s perennial Magisterium.
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In one of the ecumenical |
The Synod, centered on
Scripture, is titled “The Word of God in the Life and the
Its will be the first Synod
held not at the
It was at St.
Paul-Outside-the-Walls that Pope John XXIII first announced the Second Vatican
Council in 1959. At this same basilica, Pope Paul VI, on December 4, 1965, held
a special “Liturgy of the Word” service for the Protestant Observers who
attended Vatican II.
St. Paul-Outside-the-Walls was
the place in which Pope John Paul II announced his plans for the 1986 pan-religious
prayer-meeting at Assisi, and where the same Pope opened the Holy Door for the
year 2000 Holy Year flanked by the Schismatic Patriarch of Constantinople and
the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury.
St. Paul-Outside-the-Walls is
also the site each year of the concluding liturgy for the Week of Prayer for
Christian Unity, a once-Catholic program that has become ecumenical since the
Vatican II, and now held in conjunction with the World Council of Churches.
Pope Benedict’s first Motu Proprio, issued on May 31, 2005,
dealt with the canonical structure of St. Paul-Outside-the-Walls. In this
document, the Pope celebrated the memory of St. Paul-Outside-the-Walls as a
place of ecumenical happenings, and encouraged more such enterprises in the
future.
Then on January 21 of this
year, Vatican Information Service confirmed that as part of the Pauline Year,
St. Paul-Outside-the-Walls will open an “ecumenical chapel” wherein members of
various non-Catholic sects can hold their prayer services.[1]
In announcing the Pauline
year, Pope Benedict said on June 28 2007 that the Pauline Year would be
characterized by the “ecumenical dimension”. [2]The
October Synod proves Benedict true to his word and to his fierce attachment
to Vatican II’s new program.
On October 18, as part of the
upcoming Synod, Pope Benedict and Schismatic Patriarch Bartholomew I will
preside at first Vespers. Each will then give an address on the subject of
Scripture, with a special reference to the Pauline Year.
It will be the first time a
Schismatic Patriarch addresses the Synod Fathers. Archbishop Nikola Eterovic,
secretary general of the Synod of Bishops, explained, that the Patriarch “will
bring the greetings of Orthodox Churches that the Apostle to the Nations
founded before going to
The Synod will also welcome other
members of the Schismatic Orthodox, as well as members from various Protestant
sects.
Asia News reports, “Representatives of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
will be present along with others from the Patriarchates of Moscow, Serbia and
In another of ecumenical “first”
a Rabbi will lecture the Synod Fathers.
On October 6, Chief Rabbi Shear Yashuv Cohen of
Other special guests include
Rev A. Miller Milloy, secretary general of the United Bible Societies, and
Frère Alois, prior of the Taizé Community. The Synod will truly have an unprecedented
ecumenical dimension.
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St.
Maximilian Kolbe |
St. Maximilian Kolbe
rightly decried ecumenism as the enemy of
the Blessed Mother. Saint Maximilian said, “There is no greater enemy of
the Immaculata and her Knighthood than today’s ecumenism, which every Knight
must not only fight against, but also neutralize through diametrically opposed action
and ultimately destroy.” [4]
Our Lord gave His
Apostles the duty to “go forth and teach all nations” to bring all peoples into the one and only true
Church that Christ established.
Ecumenism does the opposite. As the eminent theologian Father Edward
Hanahoe lamented, today’s ecumenism has the effect of “perpetuating the state
of separation, serving rather to keep people out of Church than to bring them
into it.”[5]
It is the unchangeable teaching
of the Church that any “ecumenical” contact with members of false religions can
have only one purpose: to convert the non-Catholic to the Catholic Church,
outside of which there is no salvation. This was the clear teaching contained
in Pope Pius XII’s 1949 Instruction on
the Ecumenical Movement – a teaching that conformed to the perennial
Magisterium of the centuries. Here Pius XII said, "True reunion can only
come about by the return of dissidents to the one true Church of Christ"
Yet the motley collection of
false religions that will be visible at the upcoming Synod represents an
ecumenism that Pope Pius XI condemned as a false unity "quite alien to the one
Church of Christ.”[6]
Pope Benedict claims to be
operating according to a “hermeneutic of
continuity” that insists Vatican II contains no rupture with the past. At
the same time, he launches unprecedented initiatives that have no continuity
with anything in Church history, and that would have been condemned by every
Pope prior to Vatican II. Sadly, this new “hermeneutic of continuity” only
works for those who are prepared to abandon the principle of non-contradiction.[7]
As I have noted
elsewhere, Benedict’s “hermeneutic of continuity” has little to do with
re-establishing tradition. It is
another failed attempt at a “new synthesis” between various aspects of Catholic
Tradition and the liberalism of Vatican II. His
main purpose, I believe, is not so much to rescue Tradition, but to save
Vatican II, the disastrous Council on which he has built his entire
ecclesiastical career.[8]
In fact, the entire
notion of the regular “Synod of Bishops” is a direct application of Vatican
II’s collegiality. Never before in Church history did we witness bishops from
world over every two or three years gather in
We see that at this
latest October Synod, we will witness an advancement of the Conciliar
revolution. Now Rabbis and schismatic patriarchs will address the bishops, and
various non-Catholics are invited to participate.
The ecumenical element
of the October Synod guarantees the perpetuation of this liberal ecumenism
throughout the Church, to the detriment of Tradition. It will embolden diocesan
bishops to host similar ventures, such as joint conferences on religious topics
with schismatics, Protestants and rabbis. Concerned Catholics who complain of
these activities will be shouted down by the Chancery. The bishop will justify
his actions on the plea he is merely following the actions of the
“conservative” Pope Benedict XVI.
This is scandal. There is no
other word for it.
Do we wonder why the
world appears to be is falling apart? Why God seems to be withdrawing His
blessings? What can we expect when Catholic leaders launch public initiatives
that were always rightly denounced as grave sins against the First Commandment?
In 1918,
Mercier wrote, “In the name of
the Gospel, and in the light of the Encyclicals of the last four Popes, Gregory
XVI, Pius IX, Leo XIII, and Pius X, I do not hesitate to affirm that this
indifference to religion which puts on the same level the religion of
divine origin and the religions invented by men in order to include them in the
same skepticism is the blasphemy which calls down chastisement on society far more than
the sins of individuals and families.”[10]
Cardinal Mercier noted
that this was a punishment for governments
giving equal place to false religions. How much worse is it for Catholic leaders
to effectively grant false religions legitimacy within the walls of a major
Roman Basilica?
It is long past time to
say “enough”! Concerned Catholics must step up their resistance to this error
rightly condemned by St. Maximilian Kolbe as
the “enemy of the Immaculata”. Today’s ecumenism is a manifestation of
modernism and religious indifferentism. It is a central error of liberal
Catholicism. There is no excuse for a Catholic to defend it or take part in
it in any way whatsoever.
[1] For documentation on everything said
concerning St. Paul-Outside-the-Walls, see “Ecumenical Chapel at
[2] “The Holy Father Proclaims a Year
Dedicated to
[3] Synod:
253 Bishops from around the World but none from
[4] Entry of Diary dated April 23, 1933.
Cited from The Immaculata Our Ideal, Father Karl Stehlin [
[5] One Fold: Essays and Documents to
Commemorate the Golden Jubilee of the Chair of Unity Octive, 1908-1958
edited by Edward F. Hanahoe, S.A., S.T.D., and Titus F. Cranny, S.A., S.T.D.,
M.A. [Graymoor: Chair of Unity Apostolate, 1959], p. 121.
[6] Mortalium
Animos, Pope Pius XI, 1928.
[7] A
thing can not both be and not be at the same time under the same
circumstances.
[8] This
is discussed at greater length in “A Key to Benedict XVI: The Oath Against
Modernism vs. the Hermeneutic of Continuity” See www.cfnews.org/Herm.htm
[9] That is how it I
heard it defined by Father
Kenneth Boyak, who had worked with the USCCB. I discuss more completely the
notion of
the Synod and it’s relation to Vatican II in “Catholicism Dissolved, the New
Evangelization”, a four-part series that ran in CFN, October 1998 through
January 1999. For information on this article, contact cfnjv@localnet.com
[10] Quote taken from The Kingship of Christ and Organized Naturalism
by Father Denis Fahey (Regina Publications, June, 1943), p. 36. Footnoted as
cited from Cardinal Mercier’s Pastoral Letter, 1918, The Lesson of Events. (Emphasis added).
See also "The Schismatic Orthodox
and Conversion":
www.cfnews.org/Ortho-convert.htm
-
includes Pope St. Pius X's teahing on the necessity of the
"Orthodox"
to convert for salvation
Posted Oct.
4, 2008
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