Conciliar Sect Fails to Address Root Causes of Clerical Violence in Sierra Leone
Vatican News portal (February 6, 2026) reports escalating violence against clergy in Sierra Leone, citing attacks on Fr. James Joshua Jamuri and the murder of Fr. Augustine Dauda Amadu. The country’s “bishops” issued a statement condemning the assaults and demanding police intervention to protect “Church personnel and institutions.” The article frames the crisis as a law enforcement issue while ignoring the theological collapse enabling such sacrilege.
Naturalistic Analysis Conceals Divine Judgment Upon Apostate Structures
The report reduces the violence to mere criminality, lamenting stolen laptops and cash while avoiding any examination of spiritual causes. This mirrors the conciliar sect’s rejection of ex opere operato sacramental efficacy and divine justice. Pius XI’s encyclical Quas Primas (1925) declares:
“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” (§19).
Sierra Leone’s societal breakdown—like all nations rejecting Christ’s sovereignty—stems directly from its embrace of religious indifferentism promoted by the post-conciliar antipopes.
Fraudulent Shepherds Demand Secular Solutions to Spiritual Catastrophe
The “bishops’ conference” begs police protection while refusing to denounce the conciliar revolution that stripped clergy of supernatural authority. Their statement—“this is enough!”—parrots worldly activism, not the sine qua non of Catholic shepherds: public repentance and restoration of the Social Kingship of Christ. Contrast this with Pope St. Pius X’s condemnation of modernist clergy who “lay the blame on civil authorities” rather than their own apostasy (Pascendi Dominici Gregis, 1907). The conciliar sect’s clergy, ordained via the invalid 1968 rites, lack the grace to defend Christ’s flock—a fact omitted from Vatican News’ narrative.
Sacramental Nullity and False Martyrology
Fr. Amadu’s murder is deceitfully framed as persecution, yet the article provides no evidence he died in odium fidei (out of hatred for the faith). Traditional Catholic teaching requires martyrdom to involve defense of unchanging doctrine (St. Augustine, City of God, Bk. XIII). Since Sierra Leone’s conciliar churches preach religious liberty—condemned by Pius IX as “insanity” (Quanta Cura, 1864)—their clergy cannot claim martyrdom while collaborating with heresy. Moreover, the report ignores whether victims received valid sacraments, given that post-1968 sacramental forms likely render Holy Orders and Penance null.
Omission of Supernatural Remedies: From Sacrilege to Idolatry
Vatican News promotes the conciliar sect’s blasphemous ecumenism by blaming “armed robbers” rather than identifying the attacks as divine chastisement for Freemasonic-liturgical abuses. The article never mentions Eucharistic reparation, public rosaries, or the Immaculate Heart of Mary—the very remedies prescribed at Fatima before its co-option by modernists. Instead, it urges reliance on secular police forces, violating Pope Leo XIII’s warning:
“To exclude the Church from the power of making laws would rob her of her chief prerogative” (Immortale Dei, 1885).
Conclusion: Apostate Structures Incapable of Self-Diagnosis
The Sierra Leone crisis exposes the conciliar sect’s theological bankruptcy. Having replaced the Depositum Fidei with humanitarian slogans, its leaders cannot comprehend why Satan targets their institutions. True Catholics recognize these events as fulfillment of Our Lady of La Salette’s prophecy: “The Church will be in eclipse.” Only by rejecting the antipapal usurpation (beginning with Roncalli in 1958) and returning to the Mass of Pius V can such scourges cease. As Pope St. Pius X decreed:
“Modernism is the synthesis of all heresies” (Lamentabili Sane Exitu, 1907).
Until the conciliar sect dissolves, its clergy will remain prey to the violence its heresies invite.
Source:
Sierra Leone Catholic Bishops condemn rising violence against clergy (vaticannews.va)
Date: 06.02.2026