Antipopes of the Antichurch
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Conciliar Church Co-opts Slovak Martyr for Apostate Agenda
The article from the National Catholic Register (March 18, 2026) details the international promotion of Blessed Ján Havlík, a Slovak Vincentian seminarian martyred under communism, beatified on August…


Leo XIV’s Healthcare Heresy: Modernism’s Final Apostasy
The Vatican News reports that “Pope Leo XIV” (Robert Prevost) declared universal health coverage a “moral imperative” during a March 18, 2026, audience co-hosted by the Council of European Bishops’ Conferences and the World Health Organization. Speaking on the WHO European Health Equity Status Report, he decried growing healthcare inequalities, calling health “not a luxury for the few” and linking injustice to conflict. He invoked the “Samaritan spirit” and “universal fraternity,” urging Churches to cooperate with international bodies to combat inequalities. This reflects the post-conciliar Church’s complete abdication of its supernatural mission in favor of a naturalistic, secular humanist agenda that worships the creature over the Creator.
Lenten Naturalism: The Conciliar Sect’s Bible Study void of Supernatural Grace
The cited article promotes a podcast episode from The Pillar (March 18, 2026), where Dr. Scott Powell, JD Flynn, and Kate Olivera discuss the Fifth Sunday of Lent readings (Ezekiel 37:12-14, Romans 8:8-11, John 11:1-45). The summary frames the discussion around a “prophecy of hope” in Ezekiel and the “raising of Lazarus,” sponsored by the “2026 Amazing Parish Leadership Summit.” This presentation exemplifies the post-conciliar sect’s systematic evacuation of supernatural content from Sacred Scripture, replacing Catholic doctrine with a naturalistic, human-centered optimism utterly foreign to the integral faith.
Weigel’s Lenten Modernism: The ‘Adventure’ of Apostasy Disguised as Spirituality
Introduction: A Summary of the Article’s Modernist Lenten Program
The cited article, published on the National Catholic Register portal on March 18, 2026, presents a commentary by George Weigel on three “great Lenten themes” for the contemporary period. Weigel, identified as a distinguished senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, frames Lent’s purpose as preparing for Easter’s glory through: 1) an “annual catechumenate” linked to the post-Vatican II liturgical reform’s retrieval of the catechumenate; 2) what Pope Benedict XVI termed “the adventure of God, the greatness of what he has done for us,” described as God “coming out from himself” in creation, covenant, Incarnation, and Spirit; and 3) “deepening friendship with Christ,” derived from Lenten Gospel readings. The article promotes Weigel’s book, *Roman Pilgrimage*, as an aid to experience Lenten “architectural and aesthetic grandeur.” The underlying thesis is that the post-conciliar Church’s liturgical and spiritual renewal provides a superior, more engaging framework for Lent than previous traditions. This analysis will demonstrate that Weigel’s themes are not merely superficial updates but are intrinsic expressions of the theological and spiritual bankruptcy of the post-1958 “church,” constituting a radical departure from integral Catholic doctrine and a poisoning of the Lenten season with naturalistic, humanistic, and modernist errors.
Varia
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