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Ruins of ancient Nicaea with religious leaders in ecumenical prayer, symbolizing apostasy and betrayal of Catholic Truth.

Ecumenical Apostasy in Nicaea: Antipope’s Betrayal of Catholic Truth

The Vatican News portal (November 28, 2025) reports on an ecumenical prayer service in Iznik, Turkey, where antipope Leo XIV joined 27 leaders of schismatic and heretical communities to commemorate the 1,700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicaea. The event, organized by Bartholomew I—the excommunicated patriarch of Constantinople—featured calls for “fraternal encounter” and “dialogue” between Christian groups. Leo XIV asserted that the Nicene Creed provides a “profound bond” uniting all Christians, urging cooperation to address global violence while denouncing religiously-motivated wars. This spectacle of apostasy reduces Christ’s Church to a humanitarian NGO, burying the extra Ecclesiam nulla salus (no salvation outside the Church) dogma beneath pagan pluralism.

Traditional Catholic procession with the Blessed Sacrament in Manila, contrasting with secular activism.

Neo-Church Reduces Catholic Mission to Secular Activism in Global Crises

Catholic News Agency portal reports on November 28, 2025, various “ecclesial” responses to global crises: Filipino “Cardinal” Pablo Virgilio David summons Catholics to anti-corruption protests following the Masonic-aligned Iglesia ni Cristo sect’s example; Trinidad “priest” Derek Anton robbed in rectory; Mozambican “Archbishop” Inacio Saure seeks humanitarian aid for displaced people; Thai “Bishop” Paul Trairong Multree organizes flood relief; Karachi “Father” Mario Angelo Rodrigues advocates refugee rights amid Pakistan-Afghan tensions; and Talitha Kum nun Abby Avelino comments on UN femicide data. The article exemplifies the conciliar sect’s total subordination of supernatural religion to naturalistic humanitarianism.

The Magi kneeling in adoration before the Christ Child in a historic Malaysian church, symbolizing true doctrinal faith contrasted with synodal naturalism.

Tagle’s Synodal Pilgrimage: Naturalism Masquerading as Hope

Vatican News portal (November 28, 2025) reports on “Cardinal” Luis Antonio Tagle’s keynote address at the Great Pilgrimage of Hope in Penang, Malaysia. The former president of Caritas Internationalis contrasted the Magi’s pilgrimage with Herod’s fear, urging Asian Catholics to embrace “humility, openness, and light” while warning against power-driven immobility. Tagle defined Christian hope as “a theological virtue infused by God,” claiming this virtue purifies hearts to “love neighbors as God loves.” He concluded with an anecdote about providentially “getting lost” to meet migrant workers, framing this as Christ leading him “to that path.”

A traditional Catholic priest stands before Nicaea's ruins holding the Nicene Creed, contrasting with a modernist figure promoting ecumenical compromise

Nicaea’s Unchanging Dogma Versus Conciliar Apostasy

VaticanNews portal (November 28, 2025) reports on antipope Leo XIV’s visit to Istanbul, framing the Council of Nicaea (325 A.D.) as a historical event while omitting its eternal doctrinal significance. The article describes the Council’s rejection of Arianism and its establishment of Easter’s date, superficially noting that “the Creed proclaimed by the Council… is recited by Christians around the world” and that its “ecclesial unity… stands as a witness to… the ecumenical journey.” This relativization of dogma to mere inspiration for modernist ecumenism exemplifies the conciliar sect’s apostasy.

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