Conciliar Sect’s Naturalistic Distortions Mask Apostasy in Typhoon Response
The Vatican News portal (November 9, 2025) reports that antipope Leo XIV expressed “closeness” to victims of Typhoon Fung-wong in the Philippines, urging ceasefires to “honor war victims” and praising Italy’s “Thanksgiving Day” focused on “Mother Earth” and “sustainable agricultural practices.” The text reduces the Church’s mission to secular humanitarianism, omitting all supernatural purpose and subordinating divine law to modernist ecology.
Paganization of Creation: “Mother Earth” as Pantheistic Heresy
The antipope’s gratitude for “Mother Earth” directly violates Catholic teaching. Pius IX’s Syllabus of Errors condemns pantheism (Proposition 1), while Pius XI’s Quas Primas declares Christ alone as King over creation: “He possesses dominion over all creatures, not by force but by essence and nature” (§13). The term “Mother Earth” derives from Gaia worship, condemned by Paul IV’s Cum ex Apostolatus Officio as apostasy. By endorsing this neo-pagan terminology, the conciliar sect confirms its rupture from the lex credendi of the Church.
False Pacifism: Abrogation of Just War Doctrine
The call for “ceasefires and genuine commitment to negotiations” ignores the Church’s perennial teaching on bellum iustum (just war). Leo XIII’s Immortale Dei teaches that states retain the right to defend their people against aggression when peace is unjust. Pius XII reiterated this in 1944, condemning total disarmament as utopian. The article’s silence on tyrannical regimes—whose removal constitutes a moral duty—exposes the sect’s collusion with globalist agendas. Worse, the antipope equates civilian casualties with military deaths, erasing the distinction between innocent life and combatants—a heresy condemned by the Council of Trent (Session XXIV).
Environmentalist Humanism Replaces Redemptive Sacrifice
The focus on “food wastage” and “sustainable practices” reduces the Church’s mission to social engineering. Pius X’s Lamentabili Sane condemns the modernist error that “the Church is incapable of effectively defending evangelical ethics” (Proposition 63). True Catholic action—exemplified by St. Vincent de Paul’s works—flows from sanctifying grace, not climate ideology. The article’s omission of prayers for the conversion of typhoon victims or repentance for sins (cf. Luke 13:1-5) reveals its naturalistic core.
Symptomatic Omissions: The Eclipse of Supernatural Faith
Not once does the article mention Christ, the Immaculate Heart, or reparation for sins—the only remedies for divine chastisements like typhoons. Contrast this with Pius XII’s 1940 radio address after an earthquake, urging “penance and prayer to appease God’s justice.” The conciliar sect’s “deep appreciation” for “those working for peace” excludes missionaries converting infidels, martyrs defying tyrants, and priests offering the Propitiatory Sacrifice—all pillars of true peace (pax Christi in regno Christi, Pius XI).
Conclusion: A Liturgy of Apostasy
This article epitomizes the conciliar revolution: replacing the Salus animarum with UN Sustainable Development Goals, and the Kingship of Christ with pagan ecology. As St. Pius X warned in Pascendi, modernism “synthesizes all heresies” by reducing faith to humanitarian emotion. Until the Roman usurpers repent and restore the Social Reign of Christ the King, such blasphemies will escalate—proving the sect’s descent into apostasy.
Source:
Pope: Honor war victims with ceasefires, genuine commitment for peace (vaticannews.va)
Date: 09.11.2025