Antipopes of the Antichurch
News feed


Disability Ministry or Modernist Distortion?
The Catholic News Agency portal (December 3, 2025) reports on a panel discussion organized by the National Catholic Partnership on Disability ahead of the International Day of Persons with Disabilities. The panelists, Sue Do and Kathleen Davis, shared experiences of exclusion and inclusion in parish life, emphasizing advocacy for “accessible spaces,” “adaptive catechesis,” and parish “buddy systems” to foster belonging. The article frames disability ministry through a lens of social accommodation, omitting any reference to the supernatural purpose of suffering or the necessity of sacramental grace.


Conciliar Sect Exploits Holy Land Suffering for Modernist Agenda
Catholic News Agency reports on the upcoming visit of “Cardinal” Pierbattista Pizzaballa to Detroit, presenting it as solidarity with persecuted Christians while obscuring the conciliar sect’s complicity in their demise. The December 4-7 events aim to raise funds for the Jerusalem “patriarchate” through dinners and Masses, framed as humanitarian relief for Gaza and support for Middle Eastern “Catholic” communities.


The Conciliar Distortion of St. Francis Xavier’s Missionary Zeal
The Catholic News Agency portal (December 3, 2025) presents a hagiographic account of St. Francis Xavier’s missionary work, describing him as an “unlikely hero” who “transformed the entire Asian continent.” While accurately noting his 1541 departure for India and subsequent evangelization efforts in Japan, the article sanitizes the theological substance of his mission, reducing it to a naturalistic adventure story stripped of its dogmatic foundations. Such treatment exemplifies the conciliar sect’s habitual distortion of pre-Vatican II saints to legitimize its apostate ecumenical agenda.


Canada’s War on Religion: State Supremacy Over Divine Law
Catholic News Agency reports (December 2, 2025) that Canadian legislators plan to remove religious exemptions from hate-speech laws, specifically targeting provisions allowing opinions grounded in religious belief. The Liberal Party and Bloc Québécois agreement would criminalize displays of Nazi symbols while eliminating the attorney general’s oversight on hate crime prosecutions. Conservative opposition warns this lowers legal standards for “hatred” and threatens free speech. Christian Legal Fellowship argues the changes undermine constitutional protections, noting Quebec’s recent attempts to ban public prayer. The report occurs amidst Canada’s 2-million-member Catholic decline since 2011 and ongoing assaults on religious charities.
Varia
Announcement:
– News feed –implemented
– Antipopes separate web sites with their all documents refutation – in progress





