March 2026

Antichurch

Cardinal David’s Naturalistic Humanism: Rejecting Christ’s Kingship in War Discourse

The cited article, published by the VaticanNews portal on 06 March 2026, relays a reflection by “Cardinal” Pablo Virgilio David, Vice President of the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences (FABC), on the escalating conflict in the Middle East. He decries the digital detachment of modern warfare, the human suffering of civilians and migrant workers, and the economic motives behind the arms industry. His conclusion is a moral appeal to conscience, questioning who benefits from war and demanding accountability from leaders. While employing the language of human solidarity, the analysis is fundamentally rooted in a naturalistic, human-centered worldview that is utterly devoid of the supernatural perspective of the integral Catholic faith. It represents the typical pastoral output of the post-conciliar “Church,” which has replaced the reign of Christ the King with the idolatry of man.

Damaged Chaldean Church building in Erbil, Iraq, with distressed Christians including Dilan Adamat amidst rubble after missile strikes.
Antichurch

Vatican News Naturalizes Christian Martyrdom in Iraq

Vatican News portal reports on recent Iranian missile strikes in Iraqi Kurdistan, highlighting damage to buildings belonging to the Chaldean Church in Erbil. The article features an interview with Dilan Adamat, founder of “The Return,” who describes Christians as caught in a conflict “not our war” yet “targeted by both sides.” The narrative emphasizes geopolitical vulnerability, the absence of a clear front line, and the imminent risk of Christian disappearance from Iraq, warning that the community has already lost 90% of its population in 25 years.

Antichurch

Lebanese Bishops’ “Prayer for Peace”: Apostate Neutrality in the Face of Christ’s Kingship

The Council of Catholic Patriarchs and Bishops in Lebanon, aligning themselves with the antipope “Leo XIV,” issued a statement urging “perseverance in prayer for peace” amid regional conflict. The statement combines vague spiritual appeals with naturalistic demands for “justice” and “human dignity,” while utterly failing to proclaim the social reign of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the sole foundation of true peace. This is not Catholic shepherding; it is the apostate neutrality of the conciliar sect, which prefers bureaucratic humanitarianism to the unyielding proclamation of the Kingship of Christ.

Antichurch

Humanitarian Aid Without Christ: The Post-Conciliar Church’s Naturalistic Compass

Summary: The VaticanNews portal reports on the Salesians of Don Bosco, a post-conciliar religious institute, converting their schools in Lebanon into shelters for civilians displaced by the Israel-Hezbollah conflict. The article quotes Fr. Simon Zakerian, Superior of the Salesian Province, and Fr. Luis Manuel Moral of Misiones Salesianas, detailing logistical efforts to provide food, clothing, and shelter. It concludes by echoing the appeal of “Pope Leo XIV” for peace and dialogue. The entire narrative is framed within a purely naturalistic, humanitarian paradigm, utterly devoid of any reference to the supernatural purpose of suffering, the necessity of the Catholic Faith for salvation, or the Social Reign of Christ the King over nations. This exposes the complete theological and spiritual bankruptcy of the conciliar sect’s approach to crisis, which reduces the Church’s mission to a mere NGO function while silently apostatizing from her divine mandate.

Fr. Roberto Pasolini delivering Lenten sermons in a Vatican hall, emphasizing naturalistic humanism over supernatural conversion.
Antichurch

Naturalistic Humanism Masquerading as Lenten Reflection

The Vatican News portal reports on an interview with Fr. Roberto Pasolini, Preacher of the Papal Household, regarding his upcoming Lenten sermons for the year 2026. Marking the 800th anniversary of St. Francis of Assisi’s death, Fr. Pasolini states the theme will be “conversion to the Gospel according to Saint Francis,” focusing on freedom, hope, mission, and fraternity. He explicitly connects the Gospel to “concrete life and its tensions,” rejects an “abstract vision” of faith, and proposes that the “humble power of love” will ultimately produce justice and peace, even amid global conflicts. He advises against “verbal violence” by questioning one’s willingness to engage in dialogue and build respectful relationships. The article concludes with a promotional call for newsletter subscriptions. The core thesis of this presentation is that the conciliar sect has reduced the Lenten call to conversion to a mere naturalistic program of ethical humanism, utterly divorced from the supernatural ends of the Catholic religion and the Social Kingship of Christ.

Four Missionary Sisters of Charity in traditional habits praying in a chapel in Aden, Yemen, with a crucifix and portrait of Pope Pius IX symbolizing Catholic doctrine.
Antichurch

Yemen ‘Martyrs’: Conciliar Substitution of Humanitarianism for Catholic Martyrdom

Vatican News portal reports on a Mass celebrated in Abu Dhabi for the four Missionary Sisters of Charity killed in Aden, Yemen, in 2016, presenting their death as a Christian martyrdom and highlighting their service “regardless of religion.” The article, quoting Bishop Paolo Martinelli, frames the sisters as “peacemakers” whose legacy is one of naturalistic compassion. This narrative reveals the post-conciliar church’s systematic replacement of supernatural Catholic mission with indifferentist humanitarianism, while obscuring the essential theological requirement of dying in *odium fidei* for true martyrdom.

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