December 2025

Lebanese youth gathered in prayer before a crucifix, with antipope Leo XIV speaking in the background against a backdrop of ruined churches and cedars.
Antichurch

Antipope’s Naturalistic “Peace” Betrays Lebanon’s Need for Christ the King

Catholic News Agency portal reports from Lebanon (December 1, 2025) on antipope Leo XIV’s address urging youth to embrace “love, not retaliation” amid national crises. The article describes his appeal for reconciliation and service while citing figures like Carlo Acutis and St. Charbel as models. This performance of false piety conceals a complete surrender to naturalism.

Antipope Leo XIV at St. Charbel's tomb in Annaya, Lebanon - a solemn moment highlighting the clash between Catholic Tradition and modernist ecumenism
Antichurch

Apostolic Journey to Lebanon: Syncretism Disguised as Ecumenism

Vatican News reports on the second day of antipope Leo XIV’s visit to Lebanon (1 December 2025), detailing his activities: visiting the tomb of St. Charbel Makhlouf at the Maronite Monastery in Annaya, addressing clergy at the Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon in Harissa, holding an ecumenical and interreligious meeting in Beirut, and concluding with a youth gathering at the Maronite Patriarchate in Bkerké. The article frames these events as efforts to promote “coexistence,” “dialogue,” and “peace,” conspicuously omitting any reference to the necessity of conversion to the Catholic Faith or the social kingship of Christ.

A traditional Catholic priest in Bkerké, Lebanon, weeping before a kneeling crowd of youth amid economic ruin, emphasizing true pastoral care and the Social Reign of Christ the King.
Antichurch

Apostate Spectacle in Lebanon Masquerades as Catholic Pastoral Care

VaticanNews portal (December 1, 2025) reports on antipope Leo XIV’s meeting with youth at the Maronite Patriarchate in Bkerké, Lebanon, framing it as an event where the usurper “brings peace” and acts as a “big brother” to young people enduring Lebanon’s socioeconomic collapse. The article portrays the gathering as a “small World Youth Day” with 15,000 youths cheering and waving flags, while speakers describe Lebanese Christians as “sons and daughters of God” needing “hope” amidst crises. Absent is any reference to the Unbloody Sacrifice of Calvary, repentance, or the Social Reign of Christ the King. Instead, the text promotes a naturalistic “peace” detached from doctrine and flirts with interreligious syncretism by celebrating Muslim participation.

Traditional Catholic priest in somber reflection amidst modernist synodal chaos in the Philippines
Antichurch

Philippine Prelates Embrace Synodal Apostasy with Garcera’s Election

Catholic News Agency reports the election of “Archbishop” Gilbert Garcera as president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), marking a decisive shift toward institutionalizing conciliarist errors. The article notes this breaks with the conference’s tradition of elevating the vice president, revealing internal tensions within the modernist hierarchy. Garcera assumes leadership amid what the neo-church describes as “national instability,” while promoting doctrines directly condemned by the perennial Magisterium.

An elderly priest in a traditional cassock cycles through a rural Bangladeshi village carrying a disabled child, symbolizing the crisis of doctrinal neglect in modern missions.
Antichurch

Missionary Distortion: Social Service Masquerading as Catholic Mission

The Catholic News Agency portal (December 1, 2025) profiles “Father” Robert McCahill, an 88-year-old Maryknoll “missionary” celebrating 50 years in Bangladesh. The article depicts him cycling through villages to assist disabled children while living in austere conditions. It emphasizes interreligious “love” over doctrinal clarity, quoting McCahill: “I travel around and reach people of all religions with love and work.” Muslim families praise his humanitarian efforts, with one stating: “Not everything is possible with money alone; many great things are possible with love.” The piece frames his work as embodying Gospel values through social service, devoid of sacramental or evangelistic priorities.

Antipope Leo XIV addressing youth in Bkerké, Lebanon, with a focus on the absence of sacramental elements and traditional Catholic doctrine.
Antichurch

Leo XIV’s Lebanon Address: Naturalism Masquerading as Hope

Vatican News portal (December 1, 2025) reports on an encounter between antipope Leo XIV and youth in Bkerké, Lebanon. The event featured testimonies from volunteers and a speech where the usurper of Peter’s throne urged attendees to “plan, dream, and do good” despite societal crises. The address invoked secularized concepts of peace, friendship, and “charity as a universal language,” while referencing post-conciliar figures like Carlo Acutis and avoiding any mention of repentance, sacraments, or the Social Kingship of Christ.

A solemn depiction of antipope Leo XIV at an interfaith gathering in Beirut, highlighting the tension between Catholic doctrine and syncretic messages.
Antichurch

Leo XIV’s Beirut Syncretism: Apostolic Journey or Apostasy?

The Vatican News portal (December 1, 2025) reports on antipope Leo XIV’s ecumenical and interreligious gathering in Beirut, Lebanon. The article frames Lebanon as a model of interfaith coexistence, quoting Leo XIV’s praise for the nation’s “minarets and church bell towers” standing side by side, and his call for prayers from all religions to form a “single, soaring hymn” for peace. The antipope invoked Vatican II’s *Nostra Aetate* to justify dialogue that “affirms the equal dignity of every human being,” while using olive tree symbolism to promote religious syncretism as “endurance and hope.” The text concludes with a prayer to the Virgin Mary for global “reconciliation and peaceful coexistence.”

A solemn ecumenical gathering in Beirut with a false pope and religious leaders from various sects promoting false interfaith unity.
Antichurch

Apostolic Betrayal in Beirut: Conciliar Sect Promotes Religious Indifferentism

Catholic News Agency reports on antipope Leo XIV’s December 1, 2025 ecumenical gathering in Beirut, Lebanon, where he declared that Lebanon’s religious diversity proves “unity and peace can be achieved” through interfaith dialogue. The event featured joint Islamic-Christian prayers, Quranic recitations, and an olive tree planting ceremony with leaders of Sunni, Shia, Druze, Alawite, and various pseudo-Christian sects. This spectacle exemplifies the conciliar sect’s complete abandonment of Catholic missionary imperative.

Antipope Leo XIV at the Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon in 2025, promoting ecumenical apostasy with Eastern Catholic patriarchs and Orthodox leaders.
Antichurch

Apostolic Gestures Mask Ecumenical Apostasy in Lebanon

The Catholic News Agency portal reports on the December 1, 2025, activities of antipope Leo XIV during his visit to Lebanon. At the Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon in Harissa, he addressed bishops, clergy, and pastoral workers, urging them to nurture hope “even when surrounded by the sound of weapons” by imitating Mary’s faith. The event included ecumenical prayers, testimonies from interfaith leaders, and the presentation of a Golden Rose to the shrine. Later, Leo XIV met with Eastern Catholic patriarchs and Orthodox leaders at the apostolic nunciature, emphasizing “shared love” and interreligious dialogue. The article frames these actions as efforts to promote resilience and unity in a nation scarred by conflict.

Antipope Leo XIV praying at the tomb of Charbel Makhlouf in Lebanon's Annaya monastery, surrounded by modernist monks and interfaith pilgrims.
Antichurch

Apostate Ritual at St. Charbel’s Tomb Reveals Neo-Church’s Spiritual Bankruptcy

Catholic News Agency portal reports on December 1, 2025 about antipope Leo XIV’s visit to the tomb of the post-conciliar “saint” Charbel Makhlouf in Lebanon. The article describes this as a “deeply symbolic pilgrimage” where the antipope entrusted Lebanon to this figure while emphasizing alleged miracles and interfaith appeal. The text highlights the monastery’s claim of “nearly 30,000 miracles” including those reported by Muslims, presenting this as evidence of the figure’s “unique place in Lebanon’s spiritual landscape.” The antipope is quoted saying the “hermit of Annaya continues to speak with surprising power” by teaching “those who live without God how to pray” and promoting poverty amid “noise” and “ostentation.” The report concludes by framing this visit as reinforcing the antipope’s call for “conversion, hope, and unity.”

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