Antichurch

A critical portrayal of a Catholic procession led by Marc Aillet under the controversial "Our Lady of Fátima" banner.
Antichurch

Fátima Weaponized: Bayonne Bishop Invokes Masonic Apparition to Fight Euthanasia While Serving the Conciliar Sect

EWTN News reports that Marc Aillet, “bishop” of Bayonne, Lescar, and Oloron, called the faithful to prayer and fasting on May 13—the feast of “Our Lady of Fátima”—to defeat a euthanasia bill in the French Senate. The “prelate” explicitly tied the Fátima devotion to political mobilization, stating that “the stirring call to conversion and penance that the Virgin of Fátima issues to us, in response to the aberrations of the modern world, is more relevant than ever.” This appeal reveals not merely a tactical use of popular piety, but the deep entanglement of the conciliar sect with a suspected Masonic psychological operation designed to divert the Church from the true enemies within: modernist apostasy and the systematic destruction of Catholic doctrine since Vatican II.

A priest in traditional vestments kneels in prayer before a damaged altar in a war-torn cityscape, symbolizing the moral conflict between Catholic teachings and modern warfare.
Antichurch

Just War Theory Co-opted: How a “Bishop” Uses Catholic Language to Launder State Violence and Technological Atrocity

The National Catholic Register (NCR) — a portal historically aligned with the post-conciliar establishment — publishes a commentary by “Bishop” James Conley of Lincoln, Nebraska, dated May 11, 2026, titled “Just War 101: Catholic Teaching for a Dangerous Moment.” The article invokes the story of Father George Zabelka, the chaplain who blessed the Enola Gay crew before Hiroshima, then spent decades repenting of that act. Conley uses this narrative as a springboard to address two contemporary issues: the U.S.-Israeli military strikes on Iran in February 2026 and the ethical dispute between Anthropic (developer of the Claude AI system) and the U.S. Department of War over autonomous weapons and mass surveillance. He frames both through the lens of the post-conciliar Catechism’s just war principles, acknowledges some moral ambiguity regarding the Iran strikes, and praises Catholic moral theologians who submitted an amicus brief opposing AI-directed autonomous weapons. He closes by expressing solidarity with “Pope Leo XIV” and urging prayers for peace. The article’s fundamental failure — characteristic of the entire conciliar enterprise — is that it treats just war theory as a self-referential ethical calculus divorced from the supernatural mission of the Church, the Kingship of Christ, and the reality of modern warfare’s intrinsic immorality, while simultaneously legitimizing the very structures of power that make such wars inevitable.

Haitian Prime Minister kneeling in prayer at a traditional Latin Mass, contrasting diplomatic backdrop with spiritual devotion.
Antichurch

Diplomatic Pageantry Masks the Spiritual Bankruptcy of the Conciliar Sect

The National Catholic Register portal reports that Haitian Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé met with the usurper Leo XIV in Rome over the weekend of May 9–10, 2026, discussing “peace” and “strengthening relations,” culminating in the inauguration of a new Haitian embassy to the Holy See near the Vatican walls. The article presents this diplomatic theater as a sign of the “valuable contribution that the Church offers to the country,” quoting Cardinal Pietro Parolin’s vague promises of “concrete initiatives regarding peace” and a homily invoking St. Augustine on the nature of peace. The prime minister described the audience as “very emotional” and praised “the exceptional relation with the Holy See,” while the embassy’s chargé d’affaires declared the new location demonstrates “a political will to strengthen traditional and privileged relations with the Holy See.” The article frames the entire encounter through the lens of humanitarian crisis, migration, security, and the need for “the necessary contribution of the international community” — all without a single mention of the supernatural mission of the Church, the necessity of conversion to the Catholic Faith, the social reign of Christ the King, or the eternal salvation of souls.

Groundbreaking ceremony for St. Patrick's Parish in Brampton, Ontario, with Bishop Ivan Camilleri and Msgr. Owen Keenan, showcasing a Romanesque-style church modeled after Tabgha's Church of the Multiplication.
Antichurch

A New Church Without Christ the King: The Brampton Project’s Deafening Silence on the Supernatural

The National Catholic Register reports that St. Patrick’s Parish in Brampton, Ontario, part of the Archdiocese of Toronto, will break ground on May 24, 2026, for a new church building after more than a decade of planning and fundraising. The project, initially envisioned in the 1980s and intensified in 2015 under the late Fr. Vito Marziliano, has faced numerous setbacks including the death of its architect, the COVID-19 pandemic, declining attendance, and escalating costs—from an estimated $12.9 million in 2018 to $26.5 million in 2024 for a reduced 28,000-square-foot structure. The new church will be modeled after the 19th-century reconstruction of the sixth-century Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes in Tabgha, Israel, featuring Romanesque style, a cruciform shape, and rounded apse. Toronto Auxiliary Bishop Ivan Camilleri will preside over the groundbreaking ceremony on Pentecost Sunday, followed by a festive barbecue and family activities. Msgr. Owen Keenan, pastor of the parish, expressed gratitude for parishioners’ perseverance and emphasized the need for a larger space to serve a growing population, stating: “We want a place for families who are stressed to be able to come together to appeal to the Lord.” The project has raised several million dollars, with $350,000 in new donations and pledges of $1 million upon construction start. This entire narrative, however, is a masterclass in the conciliar sect’s reduction of the Faith to mere social infrastructure, devoid of any supernatural urgency or doctrinal clarity.

Haitian Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé meets with antipope Leo XIV amidst clergy in St. Mary Major Basilica during Mass for peace in Haiti in 2026.
Antichurch

Diplomatic Pageantry Masks the Spiritual Ruin of Haiti and the Neo-Church’s Complicity

EWTN News portal reports that Haitian Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé met with the antipope Leo XIV in Rome over the weekend of May 9–10, 2026, inaugurating a new embassy of Haiti to the Holy See near the Vatican walls. The article describes diplomatic pleasantries exchanged between the Haitian head of a transitional government and the conciliar sect’s Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, including discussions about “peace,” “humanitarian” concerns, and the scheduling of elections for August 30. A Mass for “peace in Haiti” was celebrated by Parolin at the Basilica of St. Mary Major, during which he quoted St. Augustine on the nature of peace. The prime minister described his audience with Leo XIV as “very emotional” and praised “the exceptional relation with the Holy See,” highlighting that “the morale of the Catholic Church” is a “positive” factor in Haitian society. This entire spectacle of diplomatic theater, far from being a genuine act of Catholic statecraft, is a grotesque parody that reveals both the spiritual bankruptcy of the conciliar sect and the utter confusion of a nation in crisis that seeks salvation from a counterfeit Church.

Antichurch

Bishop Lopes Oversees Anglican Ordinariate: Ecclesial Relativism in Action

EWTN News reports that “Pope” Leo XIV appointed Bishop Steven J. Lopes, head of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter (USA/Canada), as apostolic administrator of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of the Southern Cross in Australia. The appointment, effective May 11, 2026, places Lopes in charge of former Anglicans who have entered into communion with the conciliar structures. The Vatican reaffirmed its support for these ordinariates in a March 2026 document from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith titled “Characteristics of the Anglican Heritage as Lived in the Ordinariates Established Under the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum Coetibus.” The document highlights the “ecclesial ethos” of Anglican patrimony, emphasizing lay participation in governance and evangelization through beauty in worship, music, and art. Archbishop Anthony Randazzo, former apostolic administrator, expressed gratitude for the “grace-filled growth” and “renewal” of the Australian ordinariate. Lopes himself stated he has come to know the community over the years and will now “be its custodian for a while.”

Antichurch

White Mountain “Reconciliation”: Ecumenism Drowns Catholic Truth in Secular Sentiment

The National Catholic Register (May 11, 2026) reports on annual ecumenical gatherings at Bílá Hora (White Mountain) in the Czech Republic, where Catholics and Protestants jointly commemorate the 1620 battle that crushed the Bohemian Protestant revolt. Organized since 2020 by the lay group “Smíření Bílá hora” (“Reconciliation White Mountain”), these events—endorsed by the Czech “Bishops'” Conference, attended by “Archbishop” Jan Graubner, and praised by the antipope Francis—transform a historic Catholic victory into a stage for false ecumenism, erasing doctrinal truth in favor of sentimental unity. The article presents this as healing a “national trauma,” yet omits that the battle preserved Catholic orthodoxy against heresy, revealing the conciliar sect’s betrayal of the faith it once defended.

Antichurch

Cardinal Bo’s Myanmar Address Exposes Neo-Church’s Silence on True Causes of Crisis

National Catholic Register portal reports that Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, the archbishop of Yangon and Myanmar’s first cardinal, addressed the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference plenary assembly in Sydney on May 8, 2026, describing his country as enduring a “polycrisis” five years after the military coup. He detailed overlapping economic, social, health, and humanitarian crises, with over 3.5 million people displaced and basic systems collapsed. Bo thanked Australian Catholics for their solidarity through Catholic Mission and linked his appeal to the centenary of World Mission Sunday. He also commissioned Peter Gates as the new national director of Catholic Mission Australia. The cardinal has repeatedly called for nonviolence and dialogue amid the civil war that began in February 2021.

This address, while highlighting genuine human suffering, operates entirely within the naturalistic and modernist framework of the post-conciliar sect, reducing the Church’s mission to humanitarian aid and interfaith dialogue while remaining conspicuously silent on the supernatural causes of the crisis and the absolute necessity of the Social Reign of Christ the King for true peace and justice.

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