Eucharistic Procession in Boston: A Parade of Illusions Under the Banner of the Conciliar Sect

National Eucharistic Pilgrimage in Boston draws thousands, but beneath the veneer of piety lies a profound theological void, exposing the triumph of naturalism and the “abomination of desolation” occupying the Vatican.


The Triumph of Naturalism Over the Supernatural

The cited article from the National Catholic Register reports on a Eucharistic procession in Boston, part of the “National Eucharistic Pilgrimage.” While the event is presented as a triumph of faith, a closer examination reveals it as a textbook example of the post-conciliar obsession with external spectacle at the expense of doctrinal precision and supernatural faith. The event, led by “Archbishop” Richard Henning, is not a manifestation of the Social Reign of Christ the King, but a naturalistic parade that reduces the Most Holy Eucharist to a mere symbol of community unity.

The “Abomination of Desolation” and the Invalidity of the New Mass

The fundamental issue with any Eucharistic procession within the conciliar structure is the dubious nature of the “Eucharist” itself. Since the imposition of the Novus Ordo Missae in 1969—a rite engineered by the notorious Freemason Annibale Bugnini and supported by six Protestant observers—the theology of the Mass has been shifted from a propitiatory sacrifice to a mere “supper” or “assembly.”

As the file False Fatima Apparitions notes, the post-conciliar church systematically diminishes the efficacy of the Holy Mass in favor of spectacular acts. This procession is not an act of true reparation, but a psychological operation designed to create an illusion of vitality in a structure that has apostatized from the Faith. The “Eucharist” carried through the streets of Boston is likely invalid due to the use of the 1962 Missal (if an “indult” Mass) or, if the Novus Ordo, invalid due to the defective matter (e.g., gluten-free hosts) or the heretical intention of the “priest.”

The Cult of “Religious Freedom” and the Puritan Spirit

The article highlights a participant, Nancy Goggin, a descendant of Puritans, who claims the procession is “fitting” because the Puritans came for “religious freedom.” This statement is a blasphemous equivocation. The Puritans were heretics who rejected the sacramental priesthood, the Real Presence, and the authority of the Roman Pontiff. To suggest that a Catholic procession honors the Puritan spirit is to embrace the very indifferentism condemned by the Church.

Pope Pius IX in the Syllabus of Errors (Proposition 77) explicitly condemned the idea that “it is no longer expedient that the Catholic religion should be held as the only religion of the State, to the exclusion of all other forms of worship.” The participant’s praise of “religious freedom” aligns perfectly with the modernist agenda of Vatican II’s Dignitatis Humanae>, a document that contradicts the immutable teaching of Pope Gregory XVI (Mirari Vos) and Pope Pius IX. The procession, therefore, is not a witness to the True Faith, but a celebration of the naturalistic “right” to practice any religion, effectively placing the Catholic Faith on the same level as the Hare Krishna festival mentioned in the article as being nearby.

The “Resurgence” of a False Church

Ms. Goggin also claims there is a “resurgence in the Catholic Church” with “so many people entering.” This is a dangerous illusion. What is entering the conciliar structures is not the Catholic Faith, but a modernist, ecumenical, and naturalistic cult. As the file False Fatima Apparitions points out, the message of the post-conciliar church focuses on external threats while ignoring the “modernist apostasy within the Church.” The “resurgence” is merely the triumph of the “Church of the New Advent,” which, as Pope St. Pius X warned in Lamentabili Sane Exitu, is “incapable of effectively defending evangelical ethics, because it steadfastly adheres to its views, which cannot be reconciled with modern progress” (Proposition 63).

The Social Reign of Christ the King: A Missing Doctrine

The article mentions the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. A true Catholic response to civil governance is defined by Pope Pius XI in the encyclical Quas Primas: “Let rulers of states therefore not refuse public veneration and obedience to the reigning Christ, but let them fulfill this duty themselves and with their people, if they wish to maintain their authority inviolate.”

The Boston procession, however, made no such demands. It did not call for the conversion of the United States to the Catholic Faith, nor did it acknowledge that the state must be subject to the Sweet Christ. Instead, it baptized the secular, Masonic concept of “Independence” with a veneer of Catholic aesthetics. The “Freedom Trail” is a symbol of a revolution that was, in part, influenced by Masonic ideals; to walk the Eucharist along this trail without condemning the errors of the American Revolution is to engage in a syncretistic act of civil religion.

The “World Apostolate of Fatima” and Suspicious Devotions

The article identifies Nancy Goggin as a member of the “World Apostolate of Fatima.” As established in the file False Fatima Apparitions, the Fatima narrative is a “potential Masonic psychological operation” designed to divert attention from modernism and promote a false ecumenism. The “conversion of Russia” without the demand for the conversion of schismatics to Catholicism is a hallmark of the modernist apostasy. By promoting this devotion, the participants are unwittingly (or wittingly) advancing the agenda of the very forces that have dismantled the Church from within.

Conclusion: A Procession of the Blind

The Boston Eucharistic procession is a sad spectacle of the “people of God” following blind guides. It is a manifestation of the “abomination of desolation in the holy place” (Matt. 24:15), where the external forms of religion are maintained while the substance of the Faith has been stolen. Until the conciliar “clergy” repudiate the errors of Vatican II, recognize the invalidity of their new rites, and proclaim the Social Reign of Christ the King over all nations—including the United States—such processions are nothing but parades of a dying naturalistic cult, leading the faithful not to the Heavenly Jerusalem, but to the City of Man.


Source:
Thousands Flock to National Eucharistic Procession in Boston
  (ncregister.com)
Date: 28.06.2026

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