Alessandro Gnocchi: “Bergoglio is Destroying the Catholic Church… He is Not Catholic”
“The Church deserves this "Pope"…” |
Italian author Alessandro Gnocchi (b. 1959) writes a weekly column called Fuori Moda (“Old-Fashioned”) for the Riscossa Cristiana
web site, in which he answers questions people send him. In the
February 4, 2015 installment, Gnocchi responds to a lady named Lisetta, who
asks, with all the evidence he has provided about “Pope” Francis’
denial of Catholic truths, would it not be easier to “say what [Antonio]
Socci says” about Francis, namely, that Jorge Bergoglio is not in fact a
valid Pope
The following is Gnocchi’s explosive reply (red font added by us for emphasis):
Dearest Lisetta,
It’s
true that, as you suggest, “it would be easier to say what Socci says
of Bergoglio”. But it would be wrong in terms of the content and in
terms of the method. I will try to explain it to you in a way that
you might find schematic but, I hope, clear.
1. It is a fact and not an opinion that [Jorge] Bergoglio is destroying the Catholic Church —
and I emphasize “Catholic” — with even admirable energy. But I do not
agree with those who say that this is done in the name of an undeclared
Third Vatican Council and, therefore, that the remedy would be the
correct application of the Second Vatican Council. The disasters that
led the Church to the edge of the cliff and many Catholics to lose
their faith, come precisely from the correct application of the Second
Vatican Council: not from its spirit, but from its words.
2. I have said this many times and I will not tire of repeating it: This Church deserves this Pope.
Or better still, this Pope is the perfect expression of this Church,
which is less and less Catholic, time after time. If tomorrow Benedict
XVI would come back to the Chair of Peter, nothing would change, and the
process of self-destruction would continue without interruptions, as it
happened during the pontificate of [Joseph] Ratzinger and his conciliar
and post-conciliar predecessors. It is evident that the virus was
injected a long time ago, although it did not show up in magisterial
documents until Vatican II.
3.
I consider it a useless waste of intellectual energies to put together
complex and even striking arguments about Bergoglio not being the Pope,
so as to be able to criticize him. A Catholic can denounce,
even fiercely, all the errors that are committed in matters of Faith by
a Pope, although knowing that he is the Pope. In addition: If such a
Catholic has the ability and the prestige to do so and he does not, he
commits a grave wrong before God and the people.
4.
I consider a bit ridiculous, and very pathetic, the thought process of
those who deny the facts because they are then obliged to change their
theory. Often you can hear someone to argue in this way: “We cannot say
that this statement or this behavior of the Pope are wrong because then
we should say that he is not infallible”. And they conjure up all sorts
of mysterious interventions, summoning the name of the Holy Ghost, in
vain. But an error is an error, whoever commits it. And, in fact, if
this error is committed by the Pope, it means that even he himself,
except under certain exceptional conditions, is not infallible.
5.
I do not have the ability, the competence, or the role to say whether
Bergoglio is Pope or not. I am not able to judge if the reconstruction
of the procedures of the last conclave should make his election null. I
take note that nobody taking part in the conclave ever affirmed this
thesis [of Socci], at least openly. When they do, I will be happy to
take their opinion into account. At the same time, the opinion of a
layman like me, and I am a layman in theology and canon law regarding
this topic, I value as close to zero.
6.
Having said this, the fact that I don’t think I can say that Bergoglio
is not the Pope is not a matter of being afraid to take the last step in
my reasoning. I
am not able to say if Bergoglio is not the Pope: But I am able to say,
and I do say, that he is not Catholic, in almost all his declarations
and acts. This
is the last step in my reasoning and I think it is harder and more
painful than the step of the ones who say that Bergoglio is not the
Pope. I believe that you can acknowledge that; if I were to realize that
a further step is needed, I would take it.
7.
I do not know why our Lord permits this agony, I do not know why He
allows the visible guide of the Church to act in a conscious way to
destroy it. I do not pretend to know the reason for all this, but I am
humble enough to accept the facts, because everything that God allows,
even evil, is always in view of a good, perhaps one that we cannot even
imagine. For sure, a desolation like this is not a reward. We have to
pay for our personal sins. But I think that we are paying also for the
sins of those who came before us, particularly the sins of the pastors
who, at the time, had the obligation to defend the flock of sheep from
the wolves, opposing the drift, but didn’t do so. With ten — I do not
say a hundred — only ten Mgr. [Marcel] Lefebvres, instead of only one,
probably today we would not be in a such a pitiful condition.
8.
When I say that I am humble enough to accept the facts, I do not mean
that one should not oppose evil, injustice and the betrayal of the
faith. I only say that we must fight for what is good, for truth, and
for the salvation of our souls, and for the glory of God, without
cooking up excuses that cannot withstand the test of facts. Otherwise we
would be defeated from the very beginning.
Alessandro Gnocchi.
The Formal Schism approaches: The battle lines are being drawn ever more clearly, and there is no doubt that the worst of this is still to come.
He has put into words the very thoughts that I have had. What a terrible position we find ourselves in with so many wolves in high places. I do wonder if Jorge Bergoglio even knows that some of the faithful have his number, or if he even cares.
ReplyDeleteOh, he knows, you can see it in his eyes... I keep thinking over and over how Jesus said, "If the light of the eye is dark, how dark is the body," and how when it came out on FOX News that he said, "May God forgive you for what you've done," when they picked him as pope, everyone laughed, but he wasn't kidding.
DeleteBut Veronica, don't worry, we're not in a terrible position--Jesus can squash them, and the unclean spirits, like a bug, that's why I made my Spiritual Warfare Moms website a few weeks ago, to encourage moms to be bold, because He has all authority (Matthew 28:18).
DeleteHe simply says what any lay Catholic knows who knows his/her basic Catechism.
ReplyDeleteI do not find it 'explosive' - just basic realism. Thank you for posting the article. It is refreshing common-sense.