238 Infallible Dogmas of the Catholic Church
One of the most common questions I get is: "Which Dogmas are Infallible in the Catholic Church?" In 2013, the website Tradicat was able to conglomerate from the late Dr. Ludwig Ott's book, Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma about 238 dogmas that are either De Fide (defined by the Catholic Church as infallible) or Sent. Certa (infallible by corollary.) I improved Tradicat's numbering system a bit below, but Dr. Ott and Dr. Daniel Stramara did the hard work on this long ago. More recently, Fr. Paul Kramer and Dr. Edmund Mazza have revealed that despite being a modernist, and despite hiding the Third Secret of Fatima, Pope Benedict XVI has denied none of the following 238 dogmas as Pope, at least not in any official promulgation like an encyclical. (Elsewhere, they disprove the notion that a Pope can execute a "semi-resignation," as [...]
Either Deceived by Satan Or Discredited by Men
The The Devil's Final Battle (DFB, henceforth in this blog-post) is a book published in 2002 and edited by Fr. Paul Kramer. In it, we read: "In 1917, the very year Our Lady appeared at Fatima, St. Maximilian Kolbe as in Rome, where he saw the Masons showing their open hostility to the Catholic Church and carrying placard announcing their intention to infiltrate the Vatican so that satan would rule from the Vatican and the Pope would be his slave. They also boasted at the same time that they would destroy the Church. The intention of the Masons to destroy the Church fits in perfectly with the well-known Masonic dictum, 'We will destroy the Church by means of holy obedience...' And the curial reorganization of 1967 would be instrumental in accomplishing that aim by subjecting the whole Church to the Party [...]
RCT 7: The Certainty of Our Faith
The Roman Catechism of Trent (RCT) p. 18-20 Part I: The Creed, Article 1, Phrase 1, Section 3. Follow me on Telegram at "Padre Peregrino" at https://t.me/padreperegrino. Hit "join" at the bottom of the channel. https://rumble.com/embed/v1iw9h5/?pub=4
The Early Church Was More Rigorous Than the Medieval Church
The above picture is one of the earliest discovered paintings of Madonna and child in the catacombs of Rome. It is found in or near the Church of St. Priscilla. The earliest Christians were certainly full of the fruits of the Holy Spirit as listed in Galatians (love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control) but that does not mean that they were shallow, smiley, happy or clappy in their approach to life. The notion that the early Church's liturgy was simplistic is overturned in these videos I did on Antiquarianism and Archaeologism. (In these videos I show that the ancient Mass is closer to the TLM than the NOM.) But the close cousin of that 20th century liturgical modern-myth of antiquarianism is met in the 21st century moral modern-myth that the early Catholic Church had a [...]
QuickPod: Mark Houck Arrested
https://rumble.com/embed/v1it45t/?pub=e5jg1
We Need to Change Our Strategy with Infiltrators
When I saw this tweet by Matt Gaspers, I realized we were being trolled by the left. Or, Satan was openly trolling the left and still all leftists don't realize they are now fully under the grip of who St. Ignatius calls "the enemy of human nature." Either way, there are currently no attempts by the left anymore to hide their evil intentions or actions. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote: "We know that they are lying. They know that they are lying. They even know that we know they are lying. We also know that they know we know they are lying. But they still continue to lie." That's because the big-time leftists get "a high" not so much by lying to us, but by getting away with it. That is very thrilling for them, especially since most good people on the [...]
He Who Is Not Against Us—Is For Us
The late Fr. Gabriele Amorth was the chief exorcist of Rome in the 20th century under Pope John Paul II. In his second book, An Exorcist: More Stories, he recounts on page 124 a soldier with a demon who had originally met with him but couldn't make future appointments. Fr. Amorth writes: "Continuing with the story of the young soldier: he called me to cancel our fourth appointment, citing military duties. Several months later, I received a letter from him. He told me that he had to leave Rome because he had been suddenly transferred to northern Italy. He gratefully thanked me for the help I had provided and joyfully reported the events that had led to his complete deliverance." The soldier later wrote the exorcist out of the blue: "I am completely healed. It was the Spirit of Jesus [...]
VLX 120: The Rich Young Man
Mt 19:16-22 *** Follow me on Telegram at "Padre Peregrino" at https://t.me/padreperegrino. Hit "join" at the bottom of the channel. https://rumble.com/embed/v1i15ph/?pub=e5jg1
RCT 6: I Believe In God
Roman Catechism of Trent p. 16-17 Part I: The Creed, Article 1, Phrase 1, Section 2. You can follow me on a phone app called "Telegram" at the channel called “Padre Peregrino” at https://t.me/padreperegrino. https://rumble.com/embed/v1h7iij/?pub=e5jg1
Attending Ex-Catholics’ “Weddings”
There's a lot of combinations of sacramental debates happening today, but most of them are very similar: Someone's Catholic family member is getting married outside the Church. Half the family feels squeamish about it. A priest steps in and says to the more conservative family members, "You should indeed go to your son's wedding outside the Church, so as to not break the bonds of charity. That way, you can evangelize him back into the Church later." Then, all the lay people in the family have their consciences euthanized by the smiling priest, and they all go to the "wedding." Here's why that priest is wrong and it's actually a mortal sin to go to the "wedding" of an ex-Catholic getting married outside the Catholic Church: A true marriage is a sacrament. A simulation of a sacrament is an "imitation-mockery" [...]