I try to live my life like a juror at a trial. . .examine evidence that is put in front of me. . . The goal is to rationally sift through the evidence, weighing out the arguments in your mind, thinking the things through for yourself.
In this video I present seven pieces of evidence that Jorge Mario Bergolgio, the former cardinal archbishop of Buenos Aires, who is now called Pope Francis, is an anti pope. . . . I don't mean "bad pope", although there is lots of bad to be had, and I don't mean anti-christ, although him being a remote dress rehearsal for the anti-christ makes a lot of sense.An anti pope is a man falsely believed to be the pope but is not duly and validly elected to the Chair of Peter while the real pope is on the throne.
New Advent.org echoes this definition of an antipope: "A false claimant of the Holy See in opposition to a pontiff canonically elected. At various times in the history of the Church illegal pretenders to the Papal Chair have arisen, and frequently exercised pontifical functions in defiance of the true occupant. "
Pope Francis and Pope Benedict warmly greet each other in June 2017 |
Pope emeritus says some who are unhappy with successor Pope Francis have refused to believe he willingly stepped down
Former pope Benedict has chided conservative Roman Catholics who have not accepted his decision to resign, calling them “fanatical” and reminding them there is only one pope and it is Francis.
Benedict, now 93, became the first pope in more than 600 years to resign instead of ruling for life, saying he no longer had the strength to govern the 1.3 billion-member church.
Some hardline conservatives unhappy with the more liberal pope Francis have often voiced doubts about whether Benedict stepped down willingly in 2013, even though he has said several times in the past eight years that he did.
“It was a difficult decision. But it was a fully conscious choice and I think I did well [to resign],” he told Italy’s Corriere della Sera in an interview published on Monday. “Some of my more fanatical friends are still upset, they have not accepted my choice.”
Six of the seven items of evidence have to do with the strange abdication of Pope Benedict XVI and why it is not only incomplete but why it seems to invalidate itself in light of the canon law that it purports to follow in abdicating. The last of the seven has to do with the possible canonical crimes committed by the liberal St. Gallen Mafia cardinals in the election of Bergoglio on March 13, 2013.
I've been told. . . that Canon 1404 says that the First See or the Holy See is judged by no one. Well, the context of Canon 1404 is the competent forum provided by a canonical trial. It has nothing whatsoever to do with the question of whether or not a given sovereign pontiff is the real pope. I am not conducting that canonical trial. I'm certainly not judging the Holy See or anyone else. The cardinals of the Catholic Church are the ones assigned to sort out questions like papal elections and papal abdications.
I'm also not debating whether or not the Church has the authority to depose a pope who is a heretic. . . Whether or not Francis can be formally pronounced a heretic or even if he is a formal heretic, has nothing to do with the evidence that Benedict XVI is still the real pope.Nor is what I am saying evidence for sedevacantism.This is a binary question of is or is not Benedict XVI still the valid pope.
1) The term “pope emeritus” is not only strange but has no precedent and is confusing. It is downright confusing to have two popes in Rome at the Vatican, one active and one retired.
"After having repeatedly examined my conscience before God, I have come to the certainty that my strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry. I am well aware that this ministry, due to its essential spiritual nature, must be carried out not only with words and deeds, but no less with prayer and suffering.However, in today’s world, subject to so many rapid changes and shaken by questions of deep relevance for the life of faith, in order to govern the barque of Saint Peter and proclaim the Gospel, both strength of mind and body are necessary, strength which in the last few months, has deteriorated in me to the extent that I have had to recognize my incapacity to adequately fulfill the ministry entrusted to me. For this reason, and well aware of the seriousness of this act, with full freedom I declare that I renounce the ministry of Bishop of Rome, Successor of Saint Peter, entrusted to me by the Cardinals on 19 April 2005, in such a way, that as from 28 February 2013, at 20:00 hours, the See of Rome, the See of Saint Peter, will be vacant and a Conclave to elect the new Supreme Pontiff will have to be convoked by those whose competence it is."
“Among you is…the future pope, to whom I promise my unconditional reverence and obedience,” the pontiff said, apparently trying to allay fears that having both a reigning and retired pope living inside the Vatican might spark confusion or division within the church.
2) Pope Benedict XVI seems to have resigned only part of the papacy, the active ministerium, not the office or munus of the papacy.
Pope Benedict XVI seems to have resigned only part of the papacy, the active ministerium, the executive sphere of the papacy that empowers a pope to appoint cardinals, to write magesterial documents and to serve as Head of State of Vatican City. He did renounce that. So he stopped doing but he didn't in some sense stop being pope. In other words, he did not seem to resign the munus of the office, the charge itself of the papacy, the identity as pope.
Notice again the wording used by Coffin: "seems to have resigned only part of the papacy", "he didn't in some sense stop being pope.", "he did not seem to resign the munus of the office, the charge itself of the papacy, the identity as pope." Using phrases like "seem to" and "in some sense" is Coffin's way of absolving himself of the responsibility of telling such lies. It is how lawyers get around the law when defending their guilty clients. It is total deception.
Coffin's statement that Pope Benedict "stopped doing" but did not "stop being" pope is actually true for every pope throughout history. Once pope, always pope.
Once a man is elected pope. he will always be regarded as pope, even when he dies. This is evidenced by the fact that popes keep their papal name, they never go back to their birth name. They are always referred to as "pope" for the rest of eternity. All papal saints are known by their papal names.
But once a pope leaves the papacy either through death or resignation, he no longer has the authority of the office.
This is actually a very simple concept which Coffin and all Trads just can't seem to understand.
Continuing with this nonsense:
3) Pope Benedict’s longtime personal secretary Archbishop Georg Gänswein has made statements in speeches and also in some interviews that appear to affirm Benedict’s continued papal identity.
"The "always" is also a "for ever" – there can no longer be a return to the private sphere. My decision to resign the active exercise of the ministry does not revoke this. I do not return to private life, to a life of travel, meetings, receptions, conferences, and so on. I am not abandoning the cross, but remaining in a new way at the side of the crucified Lord. I no longer bear the power of office for the governance of the Church, but in the service of prayer I remain, so to speak, in the enclosure of Saint Peter."
4) Pope Benedict’s correct form of address is still “Your Holiness”
He still signs letters and documents as "Pope Benedict XVI, PP" which stands for pastor pastorum or Pontifex Pontificum, both of which are formal titles of the Vicar of Christ. He still wears the white zucchetto on his head. He still wears the white papal cassock.
So why not a black cassock after his resignation?
His clothing The Pope emeritus will continue to wear papal white - rather than the black of an ordinary priest, or the red of a cardinal. However it will be a simple cassock, with none of the flamboyant hats and vestments he revived during his papacy (prompting the Wall Street Journal to ask "Does the Pope Wear Prada?") He will be giving up his trademark red shoes, wearing instead brown shoes handmade for him by Mexican craftsmen during a visit to the country last year.
His ring According to tradition, the papal apartments are sealed and the Pope's gold ring - known as the fisherman's ring - is smashed with a specially designed silver hammer when the Pope leaves office. "Objects strictly tied to the ministry of St Peter must be destroyed," the Vatican says. This time round, though, the insignia on Benedict XVI's ring was merely scratched with a cross so that it can be kept for posterity - perhaps in a museum.
Clothes, like a title alone, do not give authority to a person. So even if Pope Benedict XVI dressed as he did when he was in the office of the Papacy (which. he does not), it would make no difference. At the same time, clothes and the title show that Pope Benedict can never again be Joseph Ratzinger.
This "evidence", like everything else Coffin has said, is nonsense and would never hold up in a real court of law.
5) There are at least three errors in the official Latin “declaratio” read by Pope Benedict on February 11 2013.
This is not the place to review them but I would direct your attention to the link to the 2021 book by Prof. Estefania Acosta entitled "Benedict XVI: Pope "Emeritus?" Prof. Acosta reviews the Latin mistakes and reminds us that it is a principle of traditional canon law that every rescript, every brief, every papal bull containing a fault in the Latin language makes that document null. The question becomes whether you believe that someone who is renowned for decades for his linguistic and theological precision, who could write, dream and speak in the mother tongue of the Church, Latin, would be so haphazard in composing the very document of all the documents that he wrote - this one would be analyzed for untold years to come about the most important decision of his life - the last papal act that he made.
6) “Universal peaceful acceptance" by the Church of Francis has never really occurred.
The number of leaders who don't accept the Bergoglio papacy grows around the world.
Really? And who are these "leaders", besides the Trads, who don't accept the "Bergoglio" papacy? Coffin doesn't tell us, because there is no one else.
Coffin continues with this delusion. He hits us big time with innuendo, smears and lies:
There never really has been universal nor peaceful acceptance by the Church of the Bergoglio papacy. If you're Catholic, and you're watching this, didn't you find something 'off' about him from the beginning, maybe from the first moment? Have you accepted his actions peacefully? Orthodox and traditional Catholic commentators all over the world - I was one of them - began to express grave reservations early on about the grandiose acts of super humility and mostly the doctrinal chaos generated by Francis and his ecclesial Amen corner. Are you one of them?
Then Coffin goes on to give us whiplash. After telling us that evidence of the invalidity of the "Bergoglio papacy" is that it was never peacefully accepted, Coffin goes on to tell us that this is of no importance. Why, even an anti pope was "universally and peacefully accepted." Of course, this is a lie, like almost everything else Coffin has said.
From Coffin:
The second problem is the principle of universal peaceful acceptance dates back before the medieval era when popes were elected by a claim by the people of Rome. Besides, not only have "universal and peaceful" not been defined, the principle was never a defined dogma either. As a modus vivendi in the digital age, it's an obsolete idea.
Anacletus was proclaimed the pope and he ruled Rome for eight years by vote and a consent of an absolute majority of cardinals, despite the fact that he was an antipope.
Anacletus II (died January 25, 1138), born Pietro Pierleoni, was an antipope who ruled in opposition to Pope Innocent II from 1130 until his death in 1138. After the death of Pope Honorius II, the college of cardinals was divided over his successor. Unusually, the election was entrusted to eight cardinals, who elected Papareschi (Innocent II). A larger body of cardinals then elected Pierleoni, which led to a major schism in the Roman Catholic Church.
Anacletus had the support of most Romans, including the Frangipani family, and Innocent was forced to flee to France. North of the Alps, Innocent gained the crucial support of the major religious orders, in particular Bernard of Clairvaux's Cistercians, the Abbot of Cluny Peter the Venerable; and Norbert of Xanten, the Archbishop of Magdeburg who established the Premonstratensians and held a high rank in the Court of the German Emperor Lothar III.
The lack of support from these key figures left Anacletus with few patrons outside of Rome. Anacletus, with little remaining support, lived for several years and died with the crisis unresolved. In 1139 the second Lateran Council ended the schism, although opinion remained divided.
This was hardly a time of "universal and peaceful acceptance". The Church was very divided and in great upheaval, mostly Rome against the rest of the world.
Further, Pope Innocent never supported Anacletus. Pope Innocent never at any time renounced the papacy to Anacletus. This situation cannot in any way be compared to Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis.
7) The canonically illegal behavior of the St. Gallen Mafia cardinals in conspiring to vote in their man from Buenos Aires in 2013 invalidates the Conclave.
For the record, Catholic apologist Dave Armstrong considers Patrick Coffin to be a radical Catholic reactionary.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.patheos.com/blogs/davearmstrong/2020/05/reactionary-clan-unity-skojec-vs-voris-niles-coffin.html
Unfortunately, Mr. Armstrong has been penalized very recently on Facebook because he "repeatedly shared false information." Armstrong has mostly avoided discussing politics and the COVID-19 pandemic this year, but he did post memes that went "after leftist nonsense in a subtle or satirical way." Is THAT the reason why he has been penalized on Facebook?
This is so good - thanks for refuting the lies - every time someone goes public with the kind of stuff Coffin offers, vindicates the Holy Father and the absolute necessity of his reforms, such as TC. The same faction decries the new norms for contemplative nuns.
ReplyDeleteHello, CIB. Just looking at your sidebar quotes on the Rosary and Our Blessed Mother especially the quote by St Louis de Montfort that anyone who says his Rosary everyday will never be led astray. I once knew an older very liberal leftist Democrat man, the grandfather of 2 little girls. (He liked one of his granddaughters because she was pretty and looked like his son, but disliked the other granddaughter because she was not as pretty and looked like the other grandfather.) He told me that he prayed the rosary every day and pulled it out of his pocket and showed it to me then proceeded to tell me who he hated. He hated President Bush. He hated all conservatives. He hated Republicans. Then he said if he could he would kill every one of us "with his bare hands". So now, you tell me. If a person who says their rosary everyday can never be led astray, why was this man so filled with hatred? And such deep hatred that he desired to personally kill other people? The Blessed Mother certainly did not engender hatred in the heart of this man so where did it come from? What was the origin of his monstrous hatred? Where was the love for his neighbor? Can you answer that? My personal email is susanjmatthiesen@gmail.com. (Don't forget the "j" - my middle initial - because without it the email goes to a doctor by the same name.)
ReplyDeleteI'm actually glad you brought that up. I agree, St. Louis de Montfort was wrong. Saying the rosary every day does not necessarily indicate anything. I see many people who reject the Pope and espouse many hateful views - as you do - devoutly pray and promote the rosary. And of course, anyone who rejects the Pope is not in communion with the Church.
DeleteI've actually been meaning to delete that meme, and thanks to your comment, I will do that. As St. Paul tells us in II Cor 11:14: "Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light". Our Lord looks on our heart, not on the outside. Looking good on the outside and being dead on the inside is like being a "whited sepulchres" as Our Lord said in Mat. 23:27:
"Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like unto whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's bones, and of all uncleanness."
There is no way in the world I want to start any kind of email correspondence with you. I have seen your posts on Mary Ann's site. You talk about that hateful old man in your comment. No one can be more hateful than your posts would indicate you are.
That said, I still believe that the Rosary is a very important prayer, and recommend it to everyone. There is no surer path to Christ and Salvation than Our Blessed Mother.
However I have never said that I want to kill anyone. The hateful old man is a liberal Democrat like you. He believes the same things you do so I thought you might know where that hate comes from. Someone once sent me an email saying that I should be killed in public in the most humiliating way and then cast into Hell. I just wondered if you knew where that hate deep within a person's soul comes from. You have not said....unless your reference about satan refers to you and other liberals. Because one thing is for certain - the old man's hate did not come from the Blessed Mother. She would not plant hate in anyone's heart.
ReplyDeleteAm I suppose to believe that the "hateful old man" said these things to you without any provocation from you?
DeleteSusan, if anyone would know where hate comes from, it should be you. You have certainly written enough hate-filled posts at Mary Ann's blog. Your posts about Pope Francis, whom you denounce as an evil heretic and anti-pope, are particularly vile.
I really don't know why you are commenting on my blog. There is nothing here of interest to you. This is a Catholic blog.
Susan Matthiesen, I accidentally deleted your last comment. If you want to resubmit it, fine. If not, I apologize.
DeleteI still don't understand why you are here. We are basically not the same religion even though we both claim to be Catholic. I know you agree with that.
https://catholicstand.com/traditionis-custodes-wrong-approach-unity/ Here's someone who thinks Traditionis Custodes was the wrong approach to unity. What are your thoughts, Catholic in Brooklyn?
ReplyDelete