Antipopes of the Antichurch

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A disabled man in a wheelchair prays before a crucifix as a priest offers comfort in a courtroom setting.

Delaware’s Assisted Suicide Law: A Betrayal of Divine Law and Human Dignity

Catholic News Agency reports (Dec. 10, 2025) that disability advocacy groups have filed a federal lawsuit challenging Delaware’s physician-assisted suicide law, alleging it discriminates against people with disabilities. The law, set to take effect Jan. 1, 2026, permits terminally ill adults with six-month prognoses to obtain lethal drugs. Plaintiffs argue the statute violates the Americans with Disabilities Act by creating a dual standard where disabled individuals expressing suicidal ideation receive “suicide help” rather than prevention. The complaint highlights the law’s lack of mandatory mental health evaluations and warns of insurance companies incentivizing cheaper suicide drugs over costly life-sustaining treatments. This legal challenge exposes the neo-pagan worldview masquerading as “compassion” while ignoring the Church’s immutable condemnation of self-murder in any circumstance.

A Catholic priest in traditional vestments stands solemnly at the Thai-Cambodian border, holding a crucifix amid conflict, symbolizing the absence of Christ's kingship in modern diplomacy.

Neo-Vatican’s Hollow Peace Appeal Exposes Apostate Priorities

The VaticanNews portal (10 December 2025) reports that the usurper of Peter’s throne, “Pope” Leo XIV, appealed for an “immediate end to hostilities” between Thailand and Cambodia during his general audience. The article describes border clashes causing civilian casualties and displacement, framing the conflict through purely naturalistic terms of “regional diplomacy” and “ceasefire” fragility. “I express my closeness in prayer to these dear peoples,” the antipope declared, urging parties to “resume dialogue” while omitting any reference to the Social Kingship of Christ or the supernatural obligations of nations. This modernist spectacle reduces the Church’s mission to secular conflict mediation.

Antipope Leo XIV addressing a General Audience in St. Peter's Square, Vatican, discussing naturalistic distortions of death and eternity.

Antipope Leo XIV’s Naturalistic Distortions of Death and Eternity

VaticanNews portal (December 10, 2025) reports on Antipope Leo XIV’s General Audience, wherein he meditated on death as a “constitutive part” of life leading to “happy eternity” through Christ’s Resurrection. The article emphasizes his claim that reflecting on mortality helps discover “what truly brings the Kingdom of Heaven,” while condemning technological attempts to prolong life as futile. This catechesis, framed within the series “Jesus Christ Our Hope,” reduces the supernatural reality of death to psychological self-help, omitting the necessity of sacramental grace and the Four Last Things.

Sister Isabel Turcios distributing aid to migrants at Casa del Migrante 'Frontera Digna' without sacraments or spiritual guidance.

Humanitarian Syncretism Replaces Salvation at US-Mexico Border

The VaticanNews portal (December 10, 2025) describes activities at Casa del Migrante ‘Frontera Digna’ run by “Sister” Isabel Turcios of the Franciscan Sisters of Mary Immaculate. The article promotes a naturalistic vision of migration ministry focused on temporal aid while omitting the Church’s divine mandate to save souls. Camilo, an anonymous migrant, is quoted espousing universal brotherhood without reference to Christ: “We are all living beings… we are all equal.” This humanistic philosophy permeates the report, which highlights food distribution, medical services, and anti-trafficking efforts while ignoring the sacraments and conversion of souls.

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