Antipopes of the Antichurch
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The ‘Peace’ Gospel of Antipope Leo XIV: Christ’s Kingship Rejected
The National Catholic Register reports that on March 29, 2026, antipope Leo XIV stated during Palm Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Square that God “does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war,” urging peace and praying for Middle Eastern Christians, victims of conflict, and migrants who died at sea. This homily, which presented Christ solely as “King of Peace” without any reference to His social kingship or the Church’s role in salvation, epitomizes the naturalistic and indifferentist apostasy of the post-conciliar sect.


Holy Week in the Conciliar Sect: Liturgical Theater Without Christ the King
The article from the National Catholic Register, dated March 29, 2026, reports the schedule for Holy Week and Easter liturgies under “Pope Leo XIV” at the Vatican. It details logistical arrangements—processions, flower quantities, and service times—presenting the events as standard Catholic devotional practice. The tone is neutral and reportorial, treating the post-conciliar Vatican structures as the legitimate Catholic Church. The underlying thesis is that this coverage normalizes a profound rupture: the replacement of the supernatural, sacrificial liturgy of the Roman Rite with a man-centered, aestheticized ritual that systematically omits the core Catholic doctrines of the Kingship of Christ, the propitiatory sacrifice of the Mass, and the absolute necessity of the true Faith for salvation.
Monaco Spectacle: Apostate “Pope” Flaunts Naturalism Over Christ the King
The Stadium Mass: Profanation of Calvary’s Sacrifice
The article reports that the antipope “Leo XIV” celebrated Mass at Lucas II Stadium before vast crowds. This act, presented as a highlight, is in r…
Monaco Stadium Sermon: Naturalistic ‘Mercy’ Without Christ the King
The conciliar sect’s head, “Pope” Leo XIV, delivered a homily at Monaco’s Louis II Stadium on March 28, 2026, condemning wars as the “idolatry of power and money” and urging the faithful not to become accustomed to violence. Drawing from the Gospel account of Caiaphas, he framed conflict as stemming from political fear and attachment to power, calling for “purified hearts” to achieve peace, which he defined as seeing the other as a brother, not an enemy. He emphasized that God’s justice manifests as mercy that “saves the world,” accompanying life from conception to old age. The visit, lasting eight hours at the invitation of Prince Albert II, occurred on the eve of Holy Week, and the pontiff gifted the archdiocese a sculpture of St. Francis of Assisi as a symbol of peace. The Archbishop of Monaco thanked him for reinforcing the faith against contemporary challenges.
This presentation of grace, peace, and mercy is a quintessential example of the post-conciliar apostasy: it replaces the supernatural, hierarchical, and social reign of Christ the King with a naturalistic, individualistic sentimentality utterly devoid of Catholic dogma. The homily’s omissions are as damning as its statements—silence on the Social Kingship of Christ, the Sacrifice of the Mass, the necessity of sacramental grace, and the divine judgment on societies that reject God’s law reveals a theology stripped of its supernatural foundation, reducing Christianity to a moralistic humanitarianism.
Varia
Announcement:
– News feed –implemented
– Antipopes separate web sites with their all documents refutation – in progress





