The Vatican’s False Peace: Naturalism Masquerading as Charity in Leo XIV’s Sudan and Tanzania Appeals
The Vatican’s False Peace: Naturalism Masquerading as Charity in Leo XIV’s Sudan and Tanzania Appeals
Portal Catholic News Agency reports on “Pope” Leo XIV’s November 2, 2025 Angelus address, where the antipope called for ceasefires in Sudan and Tanzania while promoting a naturalistic vision of eternal life devoid of Catholic eschatology. The article highlights his “urgent appeals for peace” through humanitarian corridors and dialogue, framed within his commentary on All Souls’ Day.
Sacrilegious Usurpation of Papal Authority
The very premise of this report constitutes a grave scandal, presenting Roberto Prevost (falsely styled “Leo XIV”) as possessing legitimate spiritual authority. As St. Robert Bellarmine established in De Romano Pontifice: “A manifest heretic cannot be Pope.” The occupants of the Vatican since 1958 have promulgated heresies condemned by Pius IX’s Syllabus of Errors (1864) and St. Pius X’s Lamentabili Sane (1907). Their appeals carry no more spiritual weight than those of any secular NGO.
Naturalism Replaces Supernatural Charity
The antipope’s exclusive focus on temporal concerns – “humanitarian corridors,” “dialogue,” and “avoid[ing] all forms of violence” – reveals the conciliar sect’s abandonment of the Church’s divine mission. Contrast this with Pius XI’s encyclical Quas Primas (1925): “When once men recognize, both in private and in public life, that Christ is King, society will at last receive the great blessings of real liberty, well-ordered discipline, peace and harmony.” The true solution to conflict lies not in ceasefire negotiations but in the Social Reign of Christ the King, which the conciliar antipopes systematically deny.
Eschatological Heresy in All Souls’ Commentary
The article quotes Prevost’s blasphemous distortion of eternal life: “being so immersed in an ocean of infinite love that time, before, and after no longer exist.” This modernist drivel, falsely attributed to Benedict XVI, contradicts the defined dogma of particular judgment (Council of Lyons II) and particular retribution (Benedict XII, Benedictus Deus). The Catechism of the Council of Trent teaches that souls in Purgatory “suffer excruciating torments” (Part I, Art. V) – not some timeless “ocean of love.” Prevost’s omission of judgment, hell, or purgatory constitutes pastoral malpractice.
Omission of Requisite Catholic Elements
Nowhere does the article mention Prevost calling for:
- Conversion of Sudan and Tanzania to the Catholic Faith
- Public consecration of nations to Christ the King
- Reparation for sins provoking divine chastisement
- Penance as prerequisite for true peace
This silence confirms the conciliar sect’s adherence to Vatican II’s heresy of religious liberty (Dignitatis Humanae), condemned by Pius IX’s Syllabus (Errors 15-18, 77-79).
Liturgical Abuse in Cemetery “Mass”
The report notes Prevost’s intention to “celebrate Mass that afternoon at Rome’s Verano Cemetery” – an illicit act violating liturgical tradition. The 1917 Code of Canon Law (can. 1205) forbade celebrating Mass in cemeteries except on All Souls’ Day or when containing consecrated churches. Even this limited permission presumed the Roman Missal’s traditional rites, not the invalid Novus Ordo service Prevost employs.
Conclusion: The Anti-Church’s True Agenda
This performance exemplifies the conciliar sect’s modus operandi:
- Replace the Unbloody Sacrifice of Calvary with community gatherings (Angelus in the square)
- Substitute Catholic social doctrine with UN-style humanitarianism
- Reduce eschatology to sentimental universalism
- Legitimize anti-Christian regimes through “dialogue”
As Pius XI warned in Quas Primas: “When once men recognize, both in private and in public life, that Christ is King, society will at last receive the great blessings of real liberty.” Until nations kneel before their true Monarch, no earthly “ceasefire” will bring lasting peace.
Source::
Pope Leo XIV urges ceasefire in Sudan, condemns post-election violence in Tanzania (catholicnewsagency.com)
Article date: 02.11.2025