Weekly News

Hi all, and I hope you are continuing to weather the storms of life with peace and hope.

This week, I have two new articles for you: the first is about the cross and its significance to members of the occult. This is important for those of us trying to decode various symbols in our culture as well as those being promoted by the Vatican, such as their logos.

The second article is a talk by a priest put out by the Fatima Centre. This is a great talk, relating the First Saturday devotion to the errors of Freemasonry, Protestantism, and Communism. You can either read the transcript or watch the video.

Please do let me know if you have any comments to make about the book chapter I sent last week!

Hope you have a good week,

AC.

“We wish it to be your rule first of all to tear away the mask from Freemasonry, and to let it be seen as it really is.” – Leo XIII, HUMANUM GENUS.

The Cross and the Occult

Most of the information in this article is taken from the book ‘The Secret Teachings of all Ages’ by Manly P. Hall, the 20th century occultist. click here to purchase your copy of this valuable reference book.

Ancients revered the cross

According to modern occultists, the cross was associated in pre-Christian times with nature-worship. The Aztecs, Toltecs and American Indians are among those who believed the cross had mystical powers. Eastern religions also incorporated the cross into their symbology, while to the Pythagoreans, the number 10, signified by an X, was sacred. The cross is also revered by the Illuminati, Rosicrucians and Alchemists who believe that it symbolises light.

The Tau or Tav Cross
Crux Ansata
Triple Tau

There are three main types of cross: the Tau; the Crux Ansata; and the Christian cross.

The Tau (Tav) Cross

The Tau cross looks like the modern capital ‘T’ and occultists believe it may have originated among the ancient Egyptians. It is believed to be the oldest form of cross and is sometimes referred to as a ‘hammer’ cross. In Kabbala-Masonry, Tubal-Cain presents a hammer in the form of a Tau cross to Hiram Abiff and this symbol is preserved in Freemasonry as the T-square. This cross has multiple forms among the occult groups, such as the Royal Arch of Freemasonry’s Triple Tau.

The Crux Ansata

The Crux Ansata, also known as the ‘cross of life’, is a Tau cross topped by a circle. Some occultists believe this form of cross is connected to a legend about St. Peter’s ‘golden key’ which gives entry to heaven. Occultists from the Egyptian mystery school revere this form of cross as having power over evil, going so far as to co-opt the words of Constantine, in hoc signo vinces. (‘in this sign I will conquer’ – a reference to the vision God granted to the pagan Constantine ensuring his victory in battle if he used Christ’s cross on his banners.)

To the occultist and pagan, the Crux Ansata is generally associated with water.

The Roman and Greek Catholic Crosses

This is the cross used by Christians to represent Christ’s death; however, occultists do not necessarily believe that Our Lord died on this form of cross.

Christian Cross

Occultists acknowledge the importance of the cross to the Christian: that it is a symbol of Christ’s sacrifice while also representing their own hardships in life. But they posit that the sacrificial aspect derives from antiquity, believing that to many ancient civilisations, the cross symbolised the equinoxes and solstices, when the sun was ‘crucified’ in astronomical terms.

Other occultists, unable to attribute Christianity’s popularity to Its intrinsic Truth, claim that the widespread adoption of the cross by Christians is only evidence that it was a highly important symbol to pagans. They point to the Southern Cross constellation, associated with seasonal rainfall and so revered by pagan civilisations, as proof of man’s inherent attraction to the cross as a symbol. The high-level Freemason, Albert Pike, taught that the four letters placed at the top of Christ’s cross during His crucifixion, are connected to the four elements which the Kabbala represents in a cruciform symbol.

Other Significant Ideas about Crosses

Occultists find significance in the fact that a cube can be opened to form a cross. (Image source here)

To the occultist, the cross within a circle may be either a symbol for the planet Earth, or for the element ‘earth’, because it is formed by four triangles representing the four elements.

Alchemists used a cross to symbolise the four constituents of the Philosopher’s Stone, and Freemasons also revere this form of the cross.

Other alchemy symbols which contain crosses.

Composition of Crosses

To the occultist, the composition of a cross is highly significant. A golden cross signifies illumination; a silver cross symbolises purification; a base metal cross symbolises humiliation; a wooden cross represents aspiration.

The cross is sometimes said to symbolise the human body due to the practise of those people who extend their arms while in prayer. The Kabbala, which identifies four natures of man (physical, vital, emotional and mental), relates each nature with one of the four elements, thus adding another layer to its association of the cross with the four elements.

Freemasonic Blasphemies against Our Lady

this is the transcript of a talk from the fatima centre; the video can be found at the end of the text.

We see very well and very clearly the development of the satanic powers for the upcoming latter times of the church; the apocalyptic times with the three symbolic dates: 1517, 1717, 1917.

1517 is the Protestant Revolution; 1717 is the foundation of Freemasonry; 1917 is the establishment of Marxism – Communism as a a power, a world power, with the October Revolution in Moscow.

It’s very interesting and very deep that Our Lady exactly mentions that when She gives us, as an answer to all this devilish attack, Her Immaculate Heart and explains in the true devotion to her Immaculate Heart how these major attacks of the devil may be overcome and will be overcome through Her Immaculate Heart. The Five First Saturdays devotion are very much linked with this.

As you see, our Lord Jesus Christ explains why the Five Saturdays. It’s a very important message of our Lord Jesus Christ. He says it’s because there are five blasphemies, major blasphemies, accomplished against Our Lady’s Immaculate Heart.

Now the first are the blasphemies against her Immaculate Conception. The second: blasphemies against her Perpetual Virginity. Blasphemies, third, against her Divine Maternity and the rejection of her role as the Mother of mankind. Now these first three blasphemies are the main errors of Protestantism and other religions who only see Mary as an ordinary woman – or, at most, the mother of the human nature of our Lord Jesus Christ. They don’t want to understand the great privileges God wanted to give to Her. And in that way, they want don’t want to submit to the Will of God.

The Will of God was that He wanted to give all the graces through Mary and therefore He made her so great – the Masterpiece of His creation. It is exactly that. It’s, in fact, the denying of the power of God and the immense love of God towards all the creatures, which focuses on His incredible, eternal love towards the greatest of all creatures, who is Our Lady.

So 1517, it begins – the attack. The great attack of the devil. Before, of course, it was a preparation but it was the establishment of the kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ. The Christianity all over the world was established in the Middle Ages. But now comes those times about which Jesus Christ is very clear. It will be focusing on the devil’s final attack.

It will be the preparation of the Holy Friday of the Church. It will be the worst of all times: the Apocalyptic times. We know very well that in this Apocalyptic times, against the devil and his two beasts and the anti-trinity, there is only one means, one salvation. It is the Our Lady. The woman, the apocalyptic woman, clothed in Sun, the moon under her feet and around her head a crown with twelve stars.

That’s exactly that. God gives us a remedy and it’s exactly that the enemy wants to destroy.

1517, Protestantism wants to finish with the greatness of Our Lady and through that, with the importance of our Lord Jesus Christ, and in fact the destruction of His kingdom on Earth. The Church – the Catholic Church, the only True Church will vanish in a Pseudo-Christian religion which is exactly the Protestant sects, divided into many pieces with no Pope, with no hierarchy, but also with no no clear doctrine and especially with no clear way back to God. And all that without Our Lady.

Now this is only the beginning. In 1717, we know very well then comes the time where they will kick out Jesus Christ and Christianity, which is Freemasonry. Here we come to the fourth and the fifth blasphemies.

Blasphemies of those who publicly seek to sow in the hearts of the children indifference, scorn and even hatred to this Immaculate Mother. What is this? It is that Freemasonry, 1717, does want to finish with the kingdom of God on Earth.

It is the establishment of the New World Order and this New World Order Order has to finish with all that is supernatural. Now Our Lady is the Mediatrix of all Grace. She gives us the whole supernatural order, the supernatural life, and this is exactly what has to be kicked out. Therefore, we have to establish a new world, a materialistic world, a world which praises our senses, our sensuality. It praises exactly that which is the contradiction of our Lady.

Our Lady is the most pure and the world is most impure. Our Lady has nothing with materialism. She’s the most spiritual being who brings us to Heaven. Freemasonry doesn’t want to speak about heaven or hell. Only for this life on Earth and therefore the very important steps to sow into the hearts of children: indifference, scorn, hatred.

First, indifference: all this supernatural life is is nothing. It’s just a private affair. It’s nothing which is important for us; that is indifference. This religious indifference is one of the most important goals of Freemasonry. That the people just don’t care about their salvation, and what comes after this world is just a fantasy each one can imagine as he likes. That is exactly why Our Lady came and She is the answer for that. Her Immaculate Heart will kick out this indifference; will bring in again the fire of faith, hope and love and of the supernatural life into our hearts.

Therefore scorn: this this is the worst of all. ‘We have to finish with that Woman’. As She crushed the head of the Satan, Satan will try to crush her head and they destroy her. That is how he works. Children, you know it’s a very interesting thing, he will do that in all people but especially in the children.

The children are the most vulnerable and it will be one of the most important works of Freemasonry to get all the educational system under their domination and their control, which is the liberal pedagogy. it is Jean-Jacques Rousseau who posits, who says there is no original sin, the man is good and is only some unhappy things.

So, all these things. Afterwards, a hundred years afterwards: Sigmund Freud’s psychology, which is all focused on exaltation of the senses, of that which are the wounds of original sin are not only normal but are what’s ‘great’ in a human being. Just the inverse and this is a terrible blasphemy.

In fact, it’s indirectly going into straight into the heart of the Mother, of the best of all mothers who love their children. And now the children will be indoctrinated to hate Her. The hatred is the last step towards her, because if somebody is in the mud, if somebody is living in impurity, he cannot stand the the All-Pure.

If somebody is kicking out what is what is true what is valuable his conscience will always accuse him. Because he cannot hear the voice of conscience, he will hate all those who will enkindle, of course, the conscience and will remind us that it’s not that. It’s a lie. What you hear its a terrible lie of the Father of lies and therefore they hate Her.

And this goes very far and this is exactly what Freemasonry does for the last three 300 years as we have seen now, and and we see it all over the world. That culminates then afterwards in the last blasphemy: of the offences of those who outrage Her in Her holy images. This means that it is just open war.

When I was in Albania, the Catholics who received us, would show us an almost destroyed statue of Our Lady which was honoured. This statue of Our Lady was bombed. They put the machine guns on Our Lady and Our Lady’s pictures and all these statues.

If you go to the capital of Lithuanian, Vilnius, you will see there the beautiful picture, the icon of Our Lady of Ostrabrama, Our Lady of the Gate of Dawn, a wonderful, wonderful icon. You will see that there, soldiers had tried to shoot it. We have even the the the remnants of one of the balls, you know, and that is very important to understand that we are we are in such a time.

These were communist people: they tried to destroy, really, the remnants of the presence of Our Lady. This is exactly what happens at the end. This is, in fact, the description of Communism, which is a world without God, which is a world where God and the supernatural level and Our Lady and Jesus Christ has nothing to do. If they show up, they will be just destroyed. They will be ridiculed. They will be made a caricature which is, in my eyes, even worse than to destroy the statues.

This is exactly how the devil is working: with that, he will come to the utmost end of a complete world without God. Of a world where the devil – the dragon – triumphs over all nations where nothing remains of truth, of faith, of love, of hope, and that is the devil’s final victory.

But it is not a victory, because therefore Our Lady came to Fatima and tells us: these are the blasphemies. All this these efforts of the devil are all blasphemies. It’s the most horrible sins committed against God because also against Our Lady.

Therefore, we know very well that the answer is the devotion to her Immaculate Heart. It is to repair and to make atonement for these blasphemies and by this way to establish reestablish the kingdom of Our Lord and of our Lady and to prepare the final Triumph. Because at the end, Her Immaculate Heart will triumph over all these wickednesses of the devil and especially in the latter times.

Weekly News

Well, the big news this week is that my book chapter is ready for you too read ( and hopefully, critique.) As mentioned previously, this chapter is from my endlessly-in-draft-mode book on Synarchy and I would like some feedback on it. If you’d like to provide feedback, email me at militantpen@ecclesiasticalfreemasonry.com so that I can send you some specific questions. You can read the book chapter here. This link is private so please don’t share it around yet and don’t forget, this isn’t the first chapter of the book. The previous articles I’ve written on Synarchy will hopefully fill you in on some of the background.

I’ve also written an article on Pope Francis’ latest nepotistic appointment of Cardinal Kevin Farrell to oversee the Vatican’s finances. Farrell is basically Francis’ Number Two these days and his ascendancy shows Francis is hellbent on shoring up support against the ‘Old Guard’ led by Parolin.

I also thought it might be time to (slowly) introduce myself to you. Here are three things you may not know about me:

  • I am a woman
  • I am a serious writer of minuscule repute (I regard the work I do here as equally serious, but since it is sometimes speculative, it would be classified by many as being ‘unserious’)
  • I sometimes have to reluctantly put this project on the back-burner while I pursue paid work.

Feel free to let me know something about yourself in the comments or by email.

Hope you have a good week,

AC.

“We wish it to be your rule first of all to tear away the mask from Freemasonry, and to let it be seen as it really is.” – Leo XIII, HUMANUM GENUS.

Roncalli in Paris (1945-52)

It appears that it was during his time in Paris that Angelo Roncalli was earmarked by Progressives as a future pontiff. France was always important to the Synarchists and through his diplomatic work, Roncalli was able to implant the Synarchic principles of ecumenism and globalism.

GALLICA

Roncalli’s time in Paris could be said to have consolidated his reputation with the Progressive faction. Like Montini, he was the perfect blend of Modernist ideology covered by a convincing traditionalist exterior. His pious attitude towards Our Lady and other traditional devotions meant that he was accepted fairly well by conservative Catholics, even though many of his actions appeared to them to lack consistency.These paradoxical actions were evidenced in several areas: in his attitude towards leftwing politicians and known Modernists as well as his promotion of globalism and ecumenism.

One of the first photographs of Msgr Roncalli in Paris (1945)

BACKGROUND

When Roncalli was thrust into diplomatic service in France, Europe was still in the throes of the Second World War. The Vatican had, to a certain degree, lost respect on the world stage due to its support for Fascism in Italy.

In France this attitude was magnified. When Marshall Petain moved his government to Vichy in 1940, the Holy See followed with its diplomatic corps. Petain pursued a policy of cooperation with Germany and Italy while Pope Pius XII and his French bishops encouraged Catholics to support the government during the German occupation. Thus both Petain and the Church were seen as Fascist collaborators which incensed the fiercely independent French. Their suspicion and resentment simmered during the years of occupation.

Petain had also been a friend to the Synarchists, employing many in his government. Later in 1945, when Marshall Pétain was prosecuted, he was interrogated about his knowledge of the Synarchist Pact.1

De Gaulle then came to power representing the New France, leading the Resistance with help from the Allies. Although the Resistance at that time was full of Communists and Socialists, De Gaulle was personally against Communism, but he enjoyed support Stalin’s support even while Petain was still in power. In fact, De Gaulle and Georges Bidault travelled to Moscow in December 1944 to sign an agreement with Stalin promising mutual support between France and the USSR.

In June 1944, only days after setting up the base of his provisional government at Bayeux in Normandy, De Gaulle met with Pope Pius XII, explaining his policy of zero-tolerance for collaborators. The Pope urged de Gaulle to come to an agreement with Marshall Petain but he was adamant: anyone who had supported the Vichy government was going to come within his crosshairs. This included Bishops such as the aristocratic Nuncio, Monsignor Valerio Valeri whom de Gaulle believed had abetted the Petain regime.

Msgr. Valeri, Apostolic Nuncio to France, 1936 – 1944

De Gaulle pressured Pope Pius to have Monsignor Valeri replaced, but at first, Pius stood his ground, since Valeri had done nothing to warrant such action. This situation continued until August 1944, when Paris was liberated from the Germans by the Allies with De Gaulle’s Free French Forces and Petain was suddenly grabbed from his rooms in Vichy and taken by Nazi soldiers to Germany.

The final straw for de Gaulle was learning that Valeri had been on the scene soon after Petain was taken away, and he began to put even more pressure on the Pope.2 De Gaulle then embarked on a great purge which particularly persecuted Catholics, leading to the persecution, including murders, of 100,000 people. The account from Frere Michel de la Sainte Trinite is chilling:

“The bishops, who themselves were threatened, were silent while the blood of Frenchmen and Catholics flowed profusely and the prisons filled with innocent people. There was no episcopal voice to denounce the scandalous injustices of the Christian Democrats in power, as there should have been. Rome, too, was silent.”3

Pius finally relented, appointing Roncalli to take the place of Monsignor Valeri – although Roncalli was his second choice. His first choice, Archbishop Fietta, had declined on the grounds of ill-health.4

Circumstances increased the pressure on Pius, as New Year’s Day was approaching and with it, the annual message of good will which would be given to de Gaulle by the head of the Diplomatic Corps. This was Valeri’s role and with tensions running so high, Pope Pius decided to send Roncalli to Paris to replace him, leaving many perplexed at his decision, including his sostituto Tardini.

Roncalli, on the eve of his departure to France (December 1944)

SYNARCHY

Petain’s Vichy government had expanded the influence of the Synarchists, but after his defeat their leverage was diluted to a certain extent. De Gaulle was highly suspicious of the Synarchists and once in power, launched a campaign to remove the remaining offenders from his government. Unfortunately, as we will later see, in his enthusiasm for rebuilding France, de Gaulle went on to unknowingly allow many Synarchists into positions of power.

For the Synarchists, a united Europe was the first step to a world government and they had marked France as being key to their plans. Although France retained a strong anti-clerical bent, its egalitarian spirit meant that independent leaders could spontaneously come forth from the grassroots and this continued to threaten the Synarchs’ long-term goal.

A great breakthrough for the Synarchic globalists came in 1948 with the founding of the United Nations. Roncalli loved to express his support for the globalist project during his New Year’s Day Addresses to the President. By this time, Vincent Auriol – a staunch atheist – was President, and Roncalli didn’t hold back his enthusiasm for the UN.

“During these last months Paris, the real crossroads of Europe and of the whole world, has had the honour of welcoming, with her customary exquisite hospitality, the great Assembly of the United Nations, convened to organise world peace….

Certainly it has not been possible to solve all our problems, and no one ever thought that complete success could be achieved. But the atmosphere of the debates has gradually become more serene. Several principles have been asserted, all worthy of respect because they correspond to the fundamental rights of men and citizens. One might indeed sum up the innumerable speeches made at the Assembly of the United Nations in the course of these three months in the words of St Paul’s advice: ‘Test everything; hold fast what is good’.5

In his December 1949 Address to President Auriol, Roncalli again alluded to the possibility of an earthly uptopia which revealed his own humanistic philosophy. He spoke of a return to a ‘Golden Age’ when ‘respect for man’s rights and justice for all’ are achieved, as they “alone are capable of restoring the moral order.”6

It must be noted that in Roncalli’s days, by contrast with the contemporary message from the ‘synodal’ Church, the Social Kingship of Christ was loudly proclaimed as being the exalted goal and the accepted solution to all the worlds’s ills. So while his ideas might have been commonplace for a politician of his time, they were not in keeping with the message of the Church. Roncalli stated:

Last summer, when the Council of Europe met for the first time at Strasbourg, all were moved by the noble and vigorous words of the President of the French National Assembly. He recalled the words of the northern philosopher: ‘Politics must bow to moral considerations’, and appealed most fervently to all to study the most pressing problems of international life and try to realise, as M. Herriot himself has said, ‘a good part of the highest ideal ever set before any delegation : peace on earth to men of good will’.7

Roncalli then made mention of the Holy Doors which were soon to be opened for the Holy Year, possibly making an allusion to the esoteric principle of, ‘as above, so below’, saying Through this door we go, to take the ‘road that goes up’, viam ascensionis, not to descend but to ascend. And this is what, on the spiritual plane, individuals and peoples are called to do: never to descend, always to rise.8

One of the most notable of the the French parliamentarians who furthered the goals of Synarchy during Roncalli’s tenure was Robert Schuman. Schuman is rumoured to have had associations with a Synarchist, professor of law Louis Le Fur, prior to World War II, and another associate of his, Jean Monnet, who is known as the ‘Father of Europe’, is also said to have been a Synarchist.9 Interestingly, Monnet had never approved of De Gaulle – possibly due to the latter’s independence and anti-Synarchist tendencies.

From the time he became PM, Schuman began to implement various plans that pushed Europe along the path to unity. One of these was the Council of Europe, signed in May, 1949, originally by 10 member nations, with the aim of ‘facilitating the economic and social progress” of its members.

The so-called Schumann Declaration of May, 1950, placed German and French coal and steel production under a single governing authority. Others nations later joined the alliance and this eventually led to the creation of the European Economic Community, and ultimately to the European Union. Jean Monnet worked closely with Schumann on the Declaration, keeping hidden the globalist agenda at its heart.

Schumann was favourably disposed towards Angelo Roncalli. He once said that, “He is the only person in Paris in whose company one feels the physical sensation of peace.”10 The sentiment was obviously mutual: in his Address to Auriol of December 1950, Roncalli referred to an event which “had seemed to promise better things and which had shown unmistakeable signs of the pacification and elevations of men’s minds.” According the footnotes accompanying Roncalli’s Mission to Paris, Loris Capovilla tells us this event was none other than the Schumann Declaration.11

Robert Schumann, Angelo Roncalli. 1950.12

It was during his time in Paris, that Roncalli appeared on the radar of the Office of Strategic Studies (OSS) a forerunner of the CIA.13 Files referring to Roncalli which were declassified in 1978 claim he sent information to the Vatican regarding de Gaulle’s commitment to ending the Franco regime in Spain.

While it may be hard to believe that the US government had an interest in Roncalli, one need only consider his track record in Turkey, where he made a habit of embroiling himself in high-level politics. Roncalli always had the appearance of one who was not aware of his own limitations and is also on record for passing on private comments from de Gaulle of a less political nature.

Possibly the most overt example of his support for the globalist project came in1951, when Roncalli was appointed Vatican observer to UNESCO.

Now I have noticed that among the seventy diplomatic missions, of which only thirty are Catholic, those who seem most responsive to the Apostolic Nuncio’s words, when he is inspired by this religious sense, are the Ambassadors in whose lands prevails a Buddhist, Confucian or Moslem tradition.

There are then certain elementary principles of a moral or religious character which constitute the original patrimony of all peoples, and upon which an understanding must be based, as the irreplaceable foundation of a common effort to succeed in the construction of the true social and world order of justice and peace.14

July 1951 as Vatican Observer at UNESCO

During his speech to UNESCO of July 1951, addressing the ‘elders’ of UNESCO, Roncalli spoke as a member of “the oldest and most widely extended cultural organisation in the world” referring to the “God of Knowledge” as the foundation of the Church.15

“UNESCO is a great burning furnace, the sparks from which will everywhere kindle … widespread cooperation in the interests of justice, liberty and peace for all the peoples of the earth, without distinction of race, language or religion…”16

Meanwhile, Pope Pius was playing right into the globalists; hands. He had identified the greatest threat to democracy as Communism and he became convinced that the only defence against its onslaught was a united Europe.

This was unfortunate for a number of reasons: firstly because the Synarchists also wanted a united Europe; secondly, it made him prey to many devious stratagems devised by others in the name of anti-Communism; thirdly, and most significantly, because Our Lady, through her messages at Fatima, had already provided the means of defeating Communism: the Consecration of Russia and the First Saturday devotion.

OCCULT

As with his time in Turkey, rumours abound of Roncalli’s occult involvement while he was in France. Accusations of this kind are not helped by the many occult references which peppered his speech. For example, when writing to the bishop of Bergamo following his rapid move to Paris, Roncalli said: “I seemed to be seized by surprise, like Habbakuk, and transported suddenly from Istanbul to Paris by a sort of incantation.…I was stupefied.”17

Nuncio Roncalli’s first public address to the faithful also contained an esoteric reference. During an address to the Institut Catholique at the church of St. Joseph des Carmes, he connected his last post in Turkey with his new position in France by saying:

These shining points, which stand for two worlds and two forms of civilisation, Constantinople and Paris, are spanned, as it were, by a brilliant rainbow, upon which glow the last words of the prayer of Jesus, who was about to leave his disciples and wished to comfort them: ‘That they may be one’.18

Here is may be recalled that the rainbow is a symbol beloved of occultists; it certainly has no Christian relevance in this speech. In any case, Roncalli took the opportunity to recall one of his favourite projects, ecumenism: Turkey was mainly Muslim and Orthodox with Catholics in the minority.

Roncalli’s Journal from this time reveals other comments which can be interpreted as occult references, or at least as heresy. One example of this is an entry from November of 1948, where there is a cryptic reference to what Roncalli called his ‘mystical death.’ (Journal, p. 270). Mystic death, far from being an accepted stage in a soul’s progress toward spiritual union with God, is part of the heresy of Quietism. The ‘mystic death’ was one of the 68 proposition of Quietism to have been condemned by the Church in 1687. The Spanish false mystic Michael de Molinos wrote that, “The inward way leads on to a state in which passion is extinguished, sin is no more, sense is deadened, and the soul, willing only what God wills, enjoys an imperturbable peace: this is the mystic death.”19

Reading Roncalli’s Journal, it becomes clear that he believed he experienced no passions and he wrote on many occasions of his constant state of peace. He even suggested in his Journal that he never once sinned seriously against purity in his entire life.

Then in April 1950, there is another use of the phrase, ‘Know thyself’20 which as explained previously, [in a previous chapter – Ed] was a favourite maxim of Aleister Crowley.

Roncalli’s December 1952 Address to President Auriol was his final one before leaving for Venice, and it must be said, it was rather unusual. In the Address, he told a story from The Fables of Jean Fontaine. This story contained the famous maxim, ‘all paths lead to Rome’ and to their mind, twas best that each a different path should find.’ This is rather startling from a man who six years hence would find himself in Rome as Supreme Pontiff.

This is followed by a reference to the ‘Know thyself’ mentioned previously, which Roncalli explains is “inscribed on the pediment of the temple of Delphi, which in the depth and universality of its wisdom far exceeds any merely individual application, may be widely understood and practised wherever responsibility is borne in the service of the common good, and wherever men’s minds are burdened with the most acute problem of the present hour : to save peace, to save peace at all costs.”

The fable continues:

To know himself is the first task decreed By the All-mighty for his servant man. Come, stir my rivulet — can you trace Your features? “Leave it,” the Hermit cried, “to settle down — And your image will appear again!” Thus in his wisdom spake the Anchorite; Nor was his counsel giv’n in vain.”21

Auriol responds in kind, “Discord hath ever ruled the Universe; And in this world of ours I could rehearse A thousand thralls of her uneasy sway.”22

The day after the Address in which he advised his heaers to ‘know thyself’, Roncalli wrote to Cardinal Achille Lienart of Lille. As well as sending his New Year’s greetings, Roncalli mentioned his speech of the previous day, and so had yet another opportunity to use the golden words, “Know Thyself.”

Yesterday on behalf of the Diplomatic Corps I was able to offer the same wishes to the President of the Republic. It is a difficult thing to speak in that noble and mixed assembly, but La Fontaine’s last Fable gave me the opportunity to recall the Know thyself of the old sages, which is valid for all times and all places.23

Of significance here is that Lienart was rumoured to have been a Freemason; what is certain is that he was one of the prelates accused by de Gaulle of being a collaborator.24

While the above comments may be no more than ambiguities, there are more serious accusations against Roncalli. According to Mary Martinez in her book, The Undermining of the Catholic Church, a Major René Rouchette, once a member of Presidential Garde Republicaine, told her in an interview that during the mid 1940’s, he and his confreres saw Roncalli leaving the Nunciature every Thursday evening to attend meetings at the Grand Orient of France lodge.25 Certainly, Fr. Malachi Martin had no doubt that Roncalli was a Mason; he is quoted in Eglise-Eclipsee as saying Roncalli was initiated into the Lodge by Vincent Auriol.26

Roncalli’s Freemasonic membership was even suggested by French Masons themselves when in 2019, they posted on their website congratulations to Matteo Zuppi on being elevated to the Cardinalate:

“As we renew our congratulations to the new Cardinal Presbyter of Sant’Egidio already expressed here we declare ourselves particularly pleased that the non-Freemason Matteo Zuppi, very recently named a Cardinal, wanted to significantly mention a Saint of the Church such as Pope John XXIII (our Mason Brother Angelo Roncalli in the world) to seal his new pastoral mission…”27

The Archbishop’s pro-masonic bent went well beyond having in common certain elements of their vision such as ecumenism; he also concretely advanced their sinister cause within the Church. Roncalli appointed a 33rd degree Freemason named Baron Yves Marsaudon, as head of the French branch of the Knights of Malta. This was the very order which Pius XII had suppressed and placed under investigation as he was well aware that it had become an organ of Freemasonry within the Church.28

Archbishop Roncalli’s Secretary at the Nunciature, Mons. Bruno Heim, told the Vatican’s investigator into the matter that Freemasonry was “one of the last forces of social conservation in today’s world, and, therefore, a force of religious conservation,” and that the nunciature of Paris was working in great secret to reconcile the Catholic Church with Freemasonry.”29

As Pope, Roncalli eventually suspended all investigations into the Knights of Malta (June 24, 1961) and restored free reign to the order.

Despite his tolerance for Freemasonry, Roncalli is said to have been pleased when his Parisian friend, Antonio Coën, renounced Masonry in favour of the religion of his youth …. Judaism!30 He was also besotted with the Jewish mystic, Simone Weil, whose philosophy contained Kabbalic themes. One of Roncalli’s biographers, Paul Johnson, relates that he enjoyed the sermons of Fr. Riquet.31 Yet, Pierre Virion tells us that Fr. Riquet was deliriously enamoured by the French Freemasons!32

WORKER PRIESTS

Among the prelates who had been concerned about losing their position under de Gaulle’s purge was Cardinal Suhard of Paris. He had supported Petain and thus had been flagged as a collaborator. But after speaking to Archbishop Montini, Suhard’s mind was put at rest; Montini assured him that Roncalli was a prelate in the mould of Radini-Tadeschi rather than the more conservative Ottaviani, as he had feared.

It was apparently Suhard who coined the term aggiornamento in reference to the need for the Church to update; this term was to become the leitmotif of Roncalli’s papacy. His ideas were very progressive and Rome became concerned about his support for the increasingly left-leaning Worker Priest movement.

The worker-priests were originally a response to the collapse of faith among men returning from the forced labour camps. Some of these men could not accept the liturgy as it had always been offered, having become used to Masses that, of necessity, were offered outside of the usual church setting. Some of the incarcerated priests had taken liberties with these Masses, even offering them in the vernacular. Such priests were believed by French conservatives to be Communists, and indeed, many of them were. Suhard refused to discipline them and began to oversee the Parisian worker-priest chapter after the movement was given conditional approval by Pius XII, who had designated France a ‘mission land.’

Roncalli didn’t publicly endorse Suhard’s ideas, but also did not reveal where his loyalties really lay. Montini, however, did support those ideas from his position in Rome and as Pope Paul VI went on to approve a modified form of worker-priest.33

The pontificates of both Roncalli and Montini show the influence of the ideas of Suhard. This is important because the worker-priest movement ‘Catholicised’ the anti-Catholic revolution, and Roncalli played a significant role in ensuring that the movement was allowed to flourish when it could have been nipped in the bud.

Customarily, Roncalli remained ambivalent as he did not want to become unpopular with either side. Although he valued a traditional practise of the Faith in many respects, the worker-priests exemplified Radini-Tedeschi’s dream for Catholic Action. Radini-Tedeschi had introduced the young Roncalli to the Opera Congressi, another worker movement, when the latter became his secretary in Bergamo, although Pius X later was later to suppress the Opera due to its enthusiasm for democracy and its lack of oversight. Radini-Tedeschi had also lent his support to the Sillon – another left-leaning movement which was eventually banned by Pius and in which Roncalli took some interest.34

It is also known that Roncalli had close contact with the Specialised Catholic Action movements.35 and that he met regularly with the French leaders of the JOC. Roncalli recorded in his his diary that those were ‘particularly remarkable’ meetings.36

To conclude this section, it should be noted that by his inaction regarding these left-wing groups, the Parisian Nuncio allowed Russia to spread her errors in post-war France.

PERSONALITY

A little has already been said about how Roncalli was seen by his peers in Paris: although Robert Schumann was quite taken with him, few of the Parisian elite took him seriously. After Roncalli’s death, a Parisian Jesuit wrote that the impression he gave while Nuncio was that of being “a clown.”37

His friend, the Modernist, Dom Beauduin, told the story of how he went to visit the Nuncio, who, with an enthusiastic laugh, whisked him through the door and onto a large chair. The chair, positioned on a platform, was none other than the Papal throne, the symbol of papal authority found at every nunciature. As Fr. Villa wrote, “The future pope’s use of a symbol of the papal sovereignty as a mere prop for his own jokes was sadly more than just a misguided attempt at humour; history would show it was prophetic, as he would use the papacy to promote heretics and debase the authority of his own office.”38

Similarly, the leaders of de France’s ruling party, the MRP, (Mouvement Républicain Populaire or Popular Republican Movement) had little respect for Roncalli, regarding him as untrustworthy and unscrupulous.39 Even his friends could see through his pretence: Jacques Dumaine, head of Protocol at the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said of Roncalli that he was “more artful than subtle.”40

To give an idea of his inflated view of himself, Roncalli was asked his opinion of the plunging necklines of society ladies present at diplomatic functions. He responded that it didn’t bother him at all, “And you don’t have to worry about the imaginations of the other diplomates present – they are too busy watching my actions to get too preoccupied with these manifestations of fashion and beauty.”41

SUPPORT FOR MODERNISTS

In his role as a diplomat, Roncalli was able to move in the elegant circles of the Parisian elite. He held fine dinner parties with a range of guests including the most radical secularists. Roncalli was preoccupied with beautifying the nunciature for his many guests at a time when poverty was rife in post-war France – although he justified the expense by claiming it was for the honour of the Pope, whose representative he truly was. A letter to Secretary of State Montini (later Pope Paul VI) provides details of the elaborate decorations Roncalli commissioned for the nunciature’s dining room. There were numerous murals, including on the ceiling, as well as expensive seventeenth century tapestries: nothing was too much for Roncalli’s salon in which the secular and religious elite of Paris were regularly entertained.42

Roncalli was also known to be friends with Eduoard Herriot, an anti Catholic socialist, who was himself a fan of both Marc Sagnier and Soviet Russia.

“Nuncio in Paris, Bishop Roncalli received at an open table Edouard Herriot and Vincent Auriol, notorious Freemasons and politicians who carried out an action persecuting the Church. In the heat of a banquet, he said to them one day: “What separates us is of little importance.”. All his happiness seemed to be that of the table where he wanted above all to please.” 43

Despite his high opinion of himself, Roncalli was out of his depth in the Parisian world of sophisticated and fashionable ideas. Even his very sympathetic biographer, Peter Hebblethwaite, wrote that Roncalli “gleaned most of his knowledge of theology from conversations” and that he could not wrap his head around the ideas of the very fashionable Teilhard de Chardin.44

By and large, Roncalli played the part of loyal representative of Pope Pius, but there are many examples which reveal his early dedication to Modernism. Such is the case of the French Ambassador, Jacques Maritain.

Roncalli met with de Gaulle in January of 1945, to discuss the latter’s choice of Maritain as French ambassador to the Holy See. The philosopher Maritain was the inventor of the liberal doctrine of ‘integral humanism’, which was to have such a devastating and lasting influence on the Church. Maritain also became very close to Cardinal Montini, more of which in another chapter, where we will explore their relationship with the Communist agitator, Saul Alinsky. Maritain’s ideas were a driving force behind the MRP, the French Christian Democratic Party which formed after France was liberated. Left-leaning, the MRP was full of Catholics in support of the Republic.

Maritain is significant because his ideas were quite heretical, although this wasn’t always acknowledged either in his lifetime or afterwards. In one paper published after his death, Maritain stated his desire that Satan would be forgiven and eventually be allowed to dwell in Limbo with the unbaptised children.45 This is hardly surprising when one learns that Maritain was led to the faith by a self-confessed ‘prophet of Lucifer’ named Leon Bloy.46 Interestingly, the language of Maritain’s philosophy was to be found in the Synarchic Pact, which referred to integral humanism as “the primacy of the spiritual in our revolutionary movement.”47

While he was stationed in Paris, Roncalli’s friend from his seminary days, Buonaiuti passed away. Roncalli had never renounced his relationship with the thrice-excommunicated Buonaiuti, and wrote at the time,

“Excommunicated in 1921, declared vitandus [shunned] in January 1926, died on April 20, 1946, Holy Saturday. Therefore he died at the age of 65: in luce et in Cruce. His admirers wrote about him that he was a profoundly and intensely religious mind, clinging to Christianity with every fiber, bound with unbreakable bonds to his beloved Catholic Church. Naturally there was no clergyman to bless his remains; no churchyard that would receive his burial.”48

Another death which took place during Roncalli’s time in Paris sheds more light on his deep-seated Modernist views. After the death of Marc Sagnier, the founder of Le Sillon, Nuncio Roncalli wrote to Sagnier’s widow. In his letter of June 1950, Roncalli described the great impression her late husband had made on him almost fifty years previously, when the latter gave a speech to Young Catholic Workers.49

Roncalli made a startling reference to the “affectionate and benevolent admonition” given by Pius X to Sagnier in 1910. Far from being an “affectionate” rebuke, Pius’ condemnation of Le Sillon was extremely firm and uncompromising, albeit made in fraternal charity. Pius made it clear in no uncertain terms that the ideology of Le Sillon was socialist, unCatholic and part of a creeping apostasy that threatened to spread throughout the world “… organized in all countries for the establishment of a universal church with neither dogmas, nor hierarchy, nor a rule for the mind, nor a bridle for the passions.”50

When the axe fell on the Modernists in the form of Pius XII’s Humanae Generis, Roncalli stayed noticeably quiet. The French liberals were hit particularly hard: Chenu, Congar, de Chardin, de Lubac and others of the nouvelle theologie school and its adjacents were censured and even lost their positions. Although he had the task of passing on the orders, Roncalli bypassed most of the controversy by taking a trip and leaving the politics to others. However the thoughts of these men recurred time and time again in Roncalli’s writings once he became Pope.

ECUMENISM

While in Turkey and Greece, Roncalli had been successful at placating non-Catholics, attempting to show that Catholicism had dropped its age-old policy of extra ecclesia nulla salus – ‘there is no salvation outside the Church’.

As time went on, Roncalli’s ecumenical bent became even more evident. In 1949, for example, he interceded with Rome for the Protestant founders of a new ecumenical community. This led to permission being granted for the celebration of their liturgies in the disused Catholic Church in the little town of Taizé.51

In paradoxical contrast, although some progressives saw it as an obstacle to ecumenism, Roncalli had no problem with Pius’ declaration of the Dogma of the Assumption in August of 1950.

LEAVING PARIS

As with most chapters of Angelo Roncalli’s life, there are several conflicting versions of the motives behind his appointment as Patriarch of Venice. The most popular version claims that in late 1952, it became obvious that Cardinal Agostini, the Patriarch of Venice, was mortally ill and Pius XII asked Roncalli to accept that post, once it became vacant. Roncalli accepted and his elevation to the rank of Cardinal was subsequently announced.

There is a different account, however, which casts Roncalli in a less favourable different light. In this version, as recounted by a sympathetic biographer, Pius XII lost patience with the overly-tolerant Nuncio who refused to voice any opposition to the worker-priests. The movement had gathered so much steam that it was espousing openly Marxist ideas, with some priests taking roles as trade union leaders.52 Seen in this light, Roncalli’s appointment to Venice was a typical Roman promoveatur ut removeatur –  “promote to remove”.

When in January, 1953, Roncalli was appointed Cardinal, his strong ties with France continued to be evident. Roncalli controversially received his red hat from the hands of the French leader, the Socialist Vincent Auriol. Although this special privilege had been granted to Catholic heads of state in France, it was pushing the boundaries to extend this honour to the atheist Auriol.

1 It was an ancient privilege of the Heads of State in Spain, Portugal and Austria to confer the biretta upon the new Cardinals. This custom had been interrupted in France in 1897 but was revived for Mgr Cerrctti (1925) and continued for Mgr Maglionc and Mgr Roncalli.53

The two were so close that Auriol visited Roncalli in Venice after he had been appointed Patriarch there. Roncalli embraced Auriol in the presence of many faithful who were “on their knees around us”, as he later wrote.54

COVER PIC: Anefo, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

  1. https://www.newdawnmagazine.com/articles/secret-history/synarchy-the-hidden-hand-behind-the-european-union ↩︎
  2. [Shepherd, p. 200] ↩︎
  3. [Frere Michel de la Sainte Trinite. “The Whole Truth about Fatima – Vol III.” iBooks. – p 283.] ↩︎
  4. [Shepherd, p. 201] ↩︎
  5. (MTF p 90) ↩︎
  6. (MTF p 111-112) ↩︎
  7. (MTF p 112) ↩︎
  8. (MTF p 112) ↩︎
  9. https://www.newdawnmagazine.com/articles/secret-history/synarchy-the-hidden-hand-behind-the-european-union ↩︎
  10. [The Good Pope, p 83.] ↩︎
  11. [MTF p 132] ↩︎
  12. citation needed ↩︎
  13. {MTF p 144} ↩︎
  14. [The Good Pope, p 87] ↩︎
  15. [The Good Pope, p 78] ↩︎
  16. (Page 8 Mission to France) ↩︎
  17. (https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12608c.htm) ↩︎
  18. (Journal, p 275) ↩︎
  19. (Mission To France p 168-169.) ↩︎
  20. (Mission To France P 170) ↩︎
  21. (Mission To France p 174) ↩︎
  22. [Shepherd of the Modern World p 204] ↩︎
  23. [Undermining of the Catholic Church, p 125.] ↩︎
  24. [Eglise-eclipsee p 119] ↩︎
  25. [https://www.traditioninaction.org/ProgressivistDoc/A_195_J23.html] ↩︎
  26. [Nikita Roncalli] ↩︎
  27. [Poncins p 13] ↩︎
  28. [Aime-Azam, as quoted in Shepherd, p 232.] ↩︎
  29. [Johnson, p 70] ↩︎
  30. [Virion, The Mystery of Iniquity.] ↩︎
  31. [Shepherd of the Modern World, p 215-21] ↩︎
  32. [Leaven p 103] ↩︎
  33. [Leaven in the Council p 78.] ↩︎
  34. [Leaven in the Council p 102] ↩︎
  35. [Johnson, p 70.] ↩︎
  36. Villa, “John XXIII,” p. 4. ↩︎
  37. [Shepherd p 213.] ↩︎
  38. [Paul Johnston, p 66] ↩︎
  39. [Three Popes and the Cardinal p 14] ↩︎
  40. (MTF p 115-117) ↩︎
  41. [Eglise-eclipsee p 119] ↩︎
  42. [Shepherd p 218-9.] ↩︎
  43. [Iota Unum, p 697, emphasis added.] ↩︎
  44. BROKEN CROSS ↩︎
  45. [Virion.] ↩︎
  46. [de Mattei, Roberto. “The Second Vatican Council: An Unwritten Story.”] ↩︎
  47. (MTF p 124-125) ↩︎
  48. [Pius X, Notre Charge Apostolique (Letter on the Sillon).] ↩︎
  49. [de Mattei, Roberto. “The Second Vatican Council: An Unwritten Story.” iBooks. P 98] ↩︎
  50. [Mark Fellows in Fatima in Twilight p 120] ↩︎
  51. MTF p 178 ↩︎
  52. [Aradi, p 149.] ↩︎

Another Fox Appointed to Guard the Henhouse

The shadow of Theodore McCarrick still darkens the halllways and offices of the Roman Curia. Last week, the Pope announced that he had appointed a McCarrick protege, Cardinal Kevin Farrell, to oversee the Vatican’s finances. It came along with the announcement that Rome is virtually bankrupt and will soon be unable to pay the pensions of its staff. Remember, we are not only talking about the pensions of clerics, but those of family men and women who deserve a decent retirement after their time of service to the Church.

Financial Woes

Last October, the Pope told his media empire to tighten its belts: those involved in the Vatican’s internet, radio, newspaper, and TV services were advised to “exercise a bit more discipline with money”. While the Vatican’s hasn’t released a full budget statement for years, its annual deficit is thought to be around 83 million euros (USD 86 million/AUD 133 million).

One can only wonder who much better the Church would have been financially ( and morally) had it not had to pay for the endless Synods and Holy Years, with their logos, marketing videos and gimmicky ‘apps’, and the other countless innovations of this train-wreck of a papacy with its Peronist leader.

The announcement is sure to inflame tension among staff from the Vatican museums, who made a class action complaint against their employer last May. At that time, 49 museum employees “cited the social teaching of the Catholic Church and Francis’ own appeals for employers to respect the dignity of workers in demanding better treatment. Among other things, they demanded better transparency about how employees are able to advance”, a restoration of seniority bonuses and insisted the Vatican follow Italian norms on sick days.” and other gripes.

McCarrick

Perhaps someone should tell them that in order to advance in the Vatican, the selection criteria includes sodomy and sex-offences, with preference given to those who engage in sexual mysticism. Which brings us to Cardinal Farrell. Farrell was, of course, a former member of McCarrick’s household who claimed he knew nothing about McCarrick’s escapades – despite ‘everyone’ who was anyone knowing about McCarrick for decades.

Here’s a video of Farrell being interviewed after McCarrick’s crimes were made public:

Farrell infamously wrote a blurb for Fr. James Martin’s pro-sodomy book, Building a Bridge:

A welcome and much-needed book that will help bishops, priests, pastoral associates, and all church leaders more compassionately minister to the LGBT community. It will also help LGBT Catholics feel more at home in what is, after all, their church.

As Phil Lawler points out, ‘personnel is policy,’ explaining that Farrell has a track record of either ignoring serious abuse or being too dense to notice it. As a member of the Legionaries of Christ, Fr. Farrell was apparently unaware that his spiritual guide was a narcissistic abuser and violator of his vows. That pattern was repeated when he subsequently failed to pick up on McCarrick’s serial abuse of seminarians and other young men.

A Successful Career

Farrell has been moving slowly but surely through the ranks: in 2019, the Pope made him camerlengo, meaning he will be making the arrangements after the pope’s death. He replaced Cardinal Parolin in 2020 as head of the Commission dealing with high-level investments and confidential international matters after the Sloane Avenue property scandal. In 2023, the Pope put Farrell in charge of the Vatican city Supreme Court – even though he has no legal qualifications.

All this smacks of Farrell enjoying the prestige of McCarrick’s mentorship, even down to his role overseeing international investments and other diplomatic matters. For it was McCarrick who once held that position, playing a large part in arranging the secretive Sino-Vatican deal.

The matter of McCarrick and his many crimes has never been dealt with appropriately by the Pope, and Farrell’s continued favour in his eyes point to McCarrick’s ongoing influence in Rome. Such is the power of sex-magick and the other diabolical practices which have smitten the once pristine Bride of Christ with a malignant disorder and created a synodal Ape of the Church.