Nicaragua’s Anti-Catholic Persecution: The Conciliar Church’s Denial of Christ the King
The article reports the expulsion of Father José Concepción Reyes Mairena by the Nicaraguan government, bringing the total of expelled religious to 309. It cites researcher Martha Patricia Molina, who states that the dictatorship has carried out 1,070 attacks and banned 16,500 processions since 2018. It notes that Bishop Sócrates René Sándigo Jirón voted in Ortega’s 2021 election, while other bishops like Rolando Álvarez and Silvio Báez were deported. Bishop Báez, meeting with “Pope” Leo XIV in 2025, called the regime’s actions “crimes against humanity” and “homicidal.” The article frames the conflict as a political human rights issue, with the Church portrayed as a victim of state oppression.
This narrative reduces the Mystical Body of Christ to a secular non-governmental organization, utterly betraying the Catholic Church’s divine mandate to proclaim the Social Kingship of Christ and her absolute immunity from secular powers, as defined by the pre-conciliar Magisterium. The article’s naturalistic focus on “crimes” and “human rights” exposes the apostate nature of the conciliar sect, which has exchanged the doctrine of Christ the King for the ideology of man.