Mothers of Dominican Friars: A Post-Conciliar Prayer Group Wrapped in Sentimentality and Spiritual Ambiguity
National Catholic Register portal reports on a group called “Mothers of Dominican Friars,” comprising 25–30 (now over 100) mothers who meet weekly via Zoom to pray the Rosary for their sons—Dominican friars and priests—while sharing fellowship and studying Dominican-authored books. The group, founded in 2016 with the encouragement of “Archbishop” J. Augustine Di Noia, a post-conciliar Dominican, emphasizes maternal support, communal prayer, and spiritual reading. While the surface piety appears commendable, the entire initiative operates within the framework of the conciliar sect, lacking any discernment regarding the doctrinal integrity of the formation these sons receive or the orthodoxy of the “priests” they support. This uncritical embrace of post-conciliar religious life, devoid of vigilance against Modernism, renders even well-intentioned prayer spiritually dangerous—a pious veneer over an apostate structure.









