Vatican Bank’s “Sustainability” Masks Apostasy from Catholic Mission


Sustainability or Surrender? Vatican Bank’s ESG Report Exposes Conciliar Sect’s Worldliness

The Vatican News portal (December 4, 2025) promotes the Institution for Works of Religion’s first Sustainability Report, boasting alignment with environmental, social, and governance (ESG) standards and Basel III banking protocols. The report celebrates €31 million net income, “ethical-Catholic” investments, and ecological initiatives like 98.9% renewable energy usage. This financial spectacle culminates the neo-church’s fifty-year betrayal of its divine mandate.


Subordination of Supernatural to Natural Order

The IOR’s report declares its mission is pursued through “responsible investments aligned with Catholic principles” and “supporting social development.” This reverses the hierarchy of ends. Quas Primas (Pius XI, 1925) condemns such inversion: “When very many have removed Jesus Christ and His most holy law from their customs, from private, family, and public life […] the entire human society had to be shaken, because it lacked a stable and strong foundation.” The report’s 27 mentions of “sustainability” and 18 of “ESG” reveal worship of the creature rather than the Creator (Rom 1:25).

Moneyval and Basel III approvals expose the conciliar sect’s slavery to globalist usurers. Pius IX’s Syllabus of Errors (1864) anathematizes the very premise: “Every office becomes vacant by the mere fact […] if the cleric publicly defects from the Catholic faith” (Canon 188.4). Compliance with FATCA—a U.S. tax surveillance scheme—constitutes submission to Caesar in God’s domain.

“Ethical Investments” as Theological Contradiction

The IOR claims “full compliance with Catholic ethical guidelines” while operating within fundamentally usurious systems. This echoes the Modernist heresy condemned in Lamentabili Sane (1907): “Truth changes with man, because it develops with him, in him, and through him” (Proposition 58). No investment “aligned with Catholic principles” can exist when the institution itself recognizes antipopes.

The report’s “double materiality matrix“—a term borrowed from EU bureaucrats—replaces the traditional moral categories of honum, verum, pulchrum. Nowhere does it mention the sine qua non of Catholic finance: restitution of ill-gotten gains (Ex 22:1; Lev 6:5). Instead, it flaunts €157 million in “value creation“—a euphemism for profit-seeking condemned by Leo XIII: “The accumulation of wealth […] has given rise to the enormous fortune of some few individuals and the utter poverty of the masses” (Rerum Novarum, 1891).

Financial “Education” as Diversion from Salvation

Training “200 clients—primarily religious congregations” in financial literacy completes the apostasy. Christ commanded: “Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses” (Mt 10:9). St. Francis of Assisi rejected coin-touching as “filthy lucre” (1 Tim 3:3). Yet the conciliar sect teaches nuns stock portfolios instead of the Spiritual Exercises.

The 1,060 hours spent on “ethical and religious topics” likely propagate the heresy of “integral ecology” from Bergoglio’s Laudato Si’ rather than the Summa Theologica. Compare this to St. Charles Borromeo, who during the 1576 Milan plague risked contagion to administer Last Rites—not balance sheets.

Ecological Paganism Replaces Redemptive Sacrifice

Boasting a “20% paper reduction” and “renewable energy” while the Vatican promotes pagan Earth worship proves Christ’s warning: “By their fruits you shall know them” (Mt 7:16). The true Church’s “ecological policy” was defined by the Council of Trent: “The sacrifice of the Mass is […] truly propitiatory […] for the living and the dead” (Session XXII). Carbon offsets cannot atone for sin—only the Blood of Christ can.

Conclusion: Bankers Cannot Inherit the Kingdom

This report exemplifies the “abomination of desolation” (Mt 24:15)—a financial complex masquerading as Christ’s Church. As St. John Chrysostom thundered: “It is impossible for a man to mount the cross and yet handle money” (Homily on Acts). The IOR’s €50 million “economic value” distribution—27% to the antipope—fulfills Apocalypse 13:17: “No man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark of the beast.” True Catholics must reject this Babylonian institution and “come out of her, my people” (Apoc 18:4).


Source:
IOR’s sustainability report highlights high transparency standards
  (vaticannews.va)
Date: 04.12.2025

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