Apostate Thanksgiving: Leo XIV’s Naturalism Masquerading as Piety


Apostate Thanksgiving: Leo XIV’s Naturalism Masquerading as Piety

The Catholic News Agency portal (November 25, 2025) reports on antipope Leo XIV’s exhortation to “say thank you to someone” during the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, framing it as a celebration uniting “people of different faiths” and even those without faith. The antipope further advocated abandoning arms in Lebanon through dialogue while omitting any reference to Christ’s Social Kingship. This calculated omission of supernatural realities exposes the conciliar sect’s complete capitulation to religious indifferentism.


Naturalization of Thanksgiving as Pagan Cult of Man

The false pontiff’s characterization of Thanksgiving as “this beautiful feast that we have in the United States, which unites all people, people of different faiths, people who perhaps do not have the gift of faith” constitutes apostasy from Catholic teaching. Pius XI definitively condemned such religious indifferentism in Quas Primas:

“When once men recognize, both in private and in public life, that Christ is King, society will at last receive the great blessings of real liberty, well-ordered discipline, peace and harmony.”

By equating the “gift of faith” with naturalistic gratitude, Leo XIV violates the First Commandment. The Council of Trent (Session VI, Canon 14) anathematizes those claiming natural virtues can replace sanctifying grace. His exhortation to “give thanks to God for the many gifts we’ve been given” while refusing to specify which God constitutes the heresy of indifferentism condemned in Pius IX’s Syllabus of Errors (Proposition 15-18).

Omission of Christ’s Kingship as Diplomatic Strategy

The antipope’s call for Lebanon to “abandon the use of arms… sit down together at the table, to dialogue” deliberately ignores the only solution to human conflict: the Social Reign of Christ the King. Pius XI’s encyclical establishes:

“Nations will be reminded by the annual celebration of this feast that not only private individuals but also rulers and princes are bound to give public honor and obedience to Christ.” (Quas Primas, §31)

Leo XIV’s reduction of peacebuilding to “respect for all people and all religions” embodies the condemned Modernist error that “truth changes with man, because it develops with him, in him, and through him” (St. Pius X, Lamentabili Sane Exitu, Proposition 58). His silence on Lebanon’s Christian genocide (33% population) reveals the conciliar sect’s betrayal of persecuted faithful.

Diplomatic Cowardice as Theological Program

The false pontiff’s vague appeal to “look for peace, to look for justice” without defining these terms according to Catholic doctrine constitutes the heresy of Modernist evolution condemned in Pascendi Dominici Gregis:

“For the Modernist, both history and science, are to be free of all prepossessions and of every species of control, whether a priori or a posteriori.” (Pascendi §13)

By urging Israelis to seek “greater unity, respect for all people and all religions“, Leo XIV directly contravenes the dogma Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus and Pius IX’s condemnation of religious liberty (Syllabus, Proposition 77-79). His Castel Gandolfo backdrop symbolizes the conciliar sect’s Babylonian exile from supernatural faith.

Theological Atrophy as Governing Principle

The article’s repeated emphasis on “dialogue” and “working together for solutions” exposes the conciliar sect’s complete abandonment of missionary mandate. Contrast this with Pius XI’s uncompromising stance:

“Nor is there any difference in this matter between the individual and the family or the State; for all men, whether collectively or individually, are under the dominion of Christ.” (Quas Primas §18)

Leo XIV’s Thanksgiving message reduces religion to ethical humanism, fulfilling St. Pius X’s warning that Modernists would “make the unbeliever form his own God” (Pascendi §14). The Antichurch’s celebration of a civil holiday as interfaith sacrament constitutes public apostasy from the One True Faith.


Source:
‘Say thank you to someone’ this Thanksgiving, Pope Leo XIV says
  (catholicnewsagency.com)
Date: 25.11.2025

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