Vatican News portal reports on May 5, 2026, that upon his departure from Castel Gandolfo, Leo XIV addressed journalists, responding to critical remarks by US President Donald Trump. The self-styled “Pope” reaffirmed the Church’s supposed stance against nuclear weapons, stating, “The mission of the Church is to proclaim the Gospel, to preach peace,” and adding, “If someone wants to criticize me for proclaiming the Gospel, let him do so truthfully.” He further claimed the Church has “consistently spoken out against all nuclear weapons,” expressing hope for “good dialogue” with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, characterized by “trust and openness.” This statement, while cloaked in the language of peace, reveals the profound theological bankruptcy and capitulation to secular agendas that define the post-conciliar abomination.
The Perversion of “Peace”: A Modernist Chimera
The very notion of “peace” espoused by Leo XIV is not the Pax Christi — the peace of Christ, which is the tranquility of order and the absence of sin — but a purely worldly, political, and ultimately naturalistic peace. This conciliar “peace” is not founded on the recognition of Christ the King’s dominion over all nations and individuals, nor on the adherence to His immutable laws. Instead, it is a peace negotiated with the powers of this world, a peace that implicitly accepts the legitimacy of secular authority’s supremacy over the spiritual. Pius XI, in his encyclical Quas Primas (1925), unequivocally stated: “the hope of lasting peace will not yet shine upon nations as long as individuals and states renounce and do not wish to recognize the reign of our Savior.” The “peace” proclaimed by Leo XIV is precisely the kind of false peace that flourishes when Christ’s reign is ignored or reduced to a mere spiritual sentiment, divorced from public life and political reality. It is the peace of the world, which Christ Himself warned would be at odds with His followers: “My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you” (John 14:27). This conciliar “peace” is a direct fruit of the modernist heresy condemned by St. Pius X in Pascendi Dominici Gregis, which seeks to reconcile the Church with “progress, liberalism and modern civilization” (Proposition 80 of the Syllabus of Errors), effectively stripping the Gospel of its supernatural and transformative power.
The Church’s True Mission: Proclaiming Christ the King, Not Negotiating with Caesar
Leo XIV’s assertion that “The mission of the Church is to proclaim the Gospel, to preach peace” is a deliberate obfuscation of the Church’s primary and supernatural mission. The Church’s mission is not merely to “preach peace” in a vague, humanitarian sense, but to proclaim Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, to teach all nations, to baptize, and to command observance of all that He has commanded (Matthew 28:19-20). This mission inherently involves the public acknowledgment of Christ’s royal authority over all aspects of human life, including states and rulers. Pius XI, in Quas Primas, declared: “His reign, namely, extends not only to Catholic nations or to those who, by receiving baptism according to law, belong to the Church, even though their erroneous opinions have led them astray or discord has separated them from love, but His reign encompasses also all non-Christians, so that most truly the entire human race is subject to the authority of Jesus Christ.” To “proclaim the Gospel” truly means to demand that all men and all nations submit to Christ’s law, not to engage in “dialogue” with secular powers on their terms, seeking “trust and openness” as if the Church were merely another NGO or political entity. The Church’s authority is derived from God, not from human consensus or diplomatic maneuvering. As Pius IX declared in the Syllabus of Errors, “The Church is not a true and perfect society, entirely free—nor is she endowed with proper and perpetual rights of her own, conferred upon her by her Divine Founder; but it appertains to the civil power to define what are the rights of the Church, and the limits within which she may exercise those rights” (Proposition 19). This is precisely the error Leo XIV embodies, implicitly accepting the secular state’s prerogative to define the Church’s role and message.
The Nuclear Question: A Symptom of Naturalistic Diversion
While the Church rightly condemns the unjust use of nuclear weapons and advocates for peace, Leo XIV’s framing of the issue is a classic example of the post-conciliar obsession with purely temporal and material concerns, diverting attention from the true spiritual battle. The primary threat to humanity is not nuclear annihilation, but modernist apostasy within the Church itself and the widespread rejection of God’s law. St. Pius X, in Pascendi, warned against “enemies within” who seek to corrupt the faith from within. The focus on nuclear weapons, while not inherently wrong, becomes a tool of distraction when it overshadows the far greater danger of losing souls through heresy, sacrilege, and the abandonment of true doctrine. The conciliar sect’s consistent harping on external threats (like nuclear war) while remaining silent on the internal rot (modernism, liturgical abuse, religious indifferentism) mirrors the tactics described in the “False Fatima Apparitions” document, which notes how the Fatima message “focuses on external threats (communism), omitting the main danger: modernist apostasy within the Church since the beginning of the 20th century.” Leo XIV’s “peace” is a peace that does not challenge the fundamental errors of modernity, but rather seeks to accommodate them.
Engaging with the World: Dialogue or Capitulation?
Leo XIV’s expressed hope for “good dialogue” with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, approached “with trust and openness,” is a hallmark of the post-conciliar spirit of irenism and false ecumenism. This approach treats the Church’s doctrine as negotiable and its authority as merely one voice among many in a pluralistic discourse. True dialogue, from a Catholic perspective, is not about finding common ground by compromising truth, but about presenting the fullness of Catholic truth with clarity and charity, calling all to conversion. The Church does not seek “trust and openness” from the world as a precondition for engagement; she demands obedience to Christ’s commandments. This conciliar “dialogue” is a far cry from the Church’s historical stance, as articulated by Pius IX, who condemned the idea that “The Roman Pontiff can, and ought to, reconcile himself, and come to terms with progress, liberalism and modern civilization” (Proposition 80 of the Syllabus of Errors). Leo XIV’s approach is a practical application of this condemned proposition, demonstrating the conciliar sect’s complete integration into the liberal, secular order.
The Usurper’s Authority: A Void of Legitimacy
It is crucial to remember that Leo XIV is not the true Pope, but a usurper occupying the Vatican. His pronouncements carry no more weight than any other layman’s opinions, and his “mission” is not that of the Church, but of the conciliar sect. The arguments presented in the “Defense of Sedevacantism” file, drawing upon St. Robert Bellarmine, Wernz and Vidal, and Canon 188.4 of the 1917 Code of Canon Law, demonstrate that a manifest heretic ipso facto loses his office. The entire line of “popes” from John XXIII onward, having embraced and propagated modernist heresies (as evidenced by the documents of Vatican II and subsequent “magisterial” acts), are manifest heretics and therefore incapable of holding any office in the Church. Leo XIV’s words, therefore, are not those of the Vicar of Christ, but of a prominent figure within the “paramasonic structure” that has infiltrated and subverted the Church’s external forms. His “proclamation of the Gospel” is a proclamation of a false gospel, a gospel of man-centered naturalism, devoid of the supernatural truths that alone can bring true peace.
Conclusion: The Bankruptcy of Conciliar “Peace”
In summary, Leo XIV’s statements at Castel Gandolfo are a microcosm of the post-conciliar apostasy. His “peace” is a worldly peace, devoid of Christ’s kingship. His “mission” is a naturalistic humanitarianism, not the supernatural salvation of souls. His “dialogue” is a capitulation to secular powers, not a proclamation of immutable truth. And his authority is null and void, a product of the modernist revolution that has emptied the Church of her divine mandate. The true Church, enduring in the faithful who profess the integral Catholic faith, recognizes no such “peace” or “mission.” Her peace is the peace of Christ, found only in obedience to His laws and the sacraments truly administered. Her mission is to proclaim Christ the King, to teach, govern, and sanctify, regardless of worldly criticism or political pressure. Leo XIV’s words are not those of the Church, but of the “abomination of desolation” that has taken her place, a stark reminder of the spiritual ruin wrought by the conciliar revolution.
Source:
Pope: ‘If someone criticizes me for proclaiming the Gospel, let him do so truthfully’ (vaticannews.va)
Date: 05.05.2026