Vatican’s Elderly Day Theme Masks Apostasy of Post-Conciliar Sect

VaticanNews portal reports on February 10, 2026, that the usurper of the Apostolic See, Leo XIV (Robert Prevost), has chosen “I will never forget you” (Is 49:15) as the theme for the Sixth “World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly.” The event—instituted by antipope Bergoglio in 2021—will occur on July 26, coinciding with the feast of Saints Joachim and Anne. The “Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life” claims this theme offers “consolation and hope” while urging “families and ecclesial communities” to recognize the elderly as “a precious presence.” This saccharine rhetoric conceals the conciliar sect’s abandonment of lex orandi, lex credendi (the law of prayer is the law of belief) in favor of naturalistic sentimentality.


Naturalism Displaces Supernatural Finality

The article reduces the elderly to mere sociological entities needing “closeness” rather than immortal souls requiring sanctification. Not once does it mention:

the necessity of sacramental Confession, preparation for a holy death, or the Four Last Things (Death, Judgment, Heaven, Hell)

Pius XI’s Quas Primas (1925) condemned such secularized pietism, teaching that “the peace of Christ can only be found in the Kingdom of Christ” through subordination of all temporal affairs to His Social Reign. Instead, the “Dicastery” promotes a humanitarian cult where “blessing” means worldly comfort, not sanctifying grace. The Prophet Isaiah’s words—originally proclaiming God’s fidelity to Israel—are weaponized to legitimize the conciliar sect’s focus on horizontal “solidarity” divorced from extra Ecclesiam nulla salus (no salvation outside the Church).

Erasure of Doctrine in Bureaucratic Language

The statement’s careful avoidance of doctrinal language exposes its apostate foundations. Terms like “ecclesial communities” (rejected by Pius XII’s Mystici Corporis, 1943) and “hope” stripped of eschatological meaning reveal the modernist cancer. Lamentabili Sane (1907) condemned precisely this reduction of faith to “self-awareness of man’s relation to God” (Proposition 20). The article’s claim that God’s love “never fails, not even in the fragility of old age” ignores the necessity of perseverance in grace—a silence implying the heresy of universal salvation.

Liturgical Sabotage and Invalid Sacraments

The call for “Eucharistic liturgy” in cathedrals omits crucial distinctions:

  • The Novus Ordo “Mass”—a manufactured rite lacking propitiatory intent—cannot fulfill the Church’s definition of the Holy Sacrifice (Council of Trent, Session XXII).
  • “Bishops” consecrated with the 1968 rite lack valid orders, rendering their “liturgies” sacrilegious simulations (Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Inter Insigniores, 1976).

Thus, the elderly are invited to idolatrous assemblies that further separate them from the True Mass—the sole source of graces needed for salvation.

Omission of the Church’s True Mission

Nowhere does the article reference the Church’s primary duty: to save souls by teaching, governing, and sanctifying (Pastor Aeternus, Vatican I). The “World Day” framework—like all conciliar innovations—substitutes the Social Reign of Christ with a UN-style “awareness campaign.” Pius IX’s Syllabus of Errors (1864) anathematized such equating of the Church with secular NGOs (Proposition 19). The elderly deserve not sentimental platitudes but warning that without conversion and reception of valid sacraments, their suffering—however advanced in age—merits eternal damnation.

Symptomatic of Conciliar Apostasy

This event epitomizes the conciliar sect’s essence: a pseudo-religious NGO advancing the modernist tenet that “truth changes with man” (Lamentabili Sane, Proposition 58). By divorcing charity from dogma, it fulfills Bergoglio’s vision of a “field hospital” that bandages wounds while withholding the medicine of truth. As St. Pius X warned, modernists “lay the axe not to the branches of the Church, but to the very root” (Pascendi Dominici Gregis, 1907). Until the Vatican occupiers repent and submit to pre-1958 magisterium, their “pastoral care” remains a satanic parody.


Source:
'I will never forget you:' Theme for Sixth World Day for Grandparents and the Elderly
  (vaticannews.va)
Date: 10.02.2026