Father Malachi Martin says "There was this consecration, this
enthronement of Satan within the Vatican, of Lucifer by the way. It's a
historical fact. It was done one particular day by a certain group of
people representing Luciferians all over the world, especially American
Luciferians. It was done. Therefore, in a certain sense, Lucifer has
power. He doesn't own yet, but I'm sure he hopes to own some Pope as
his man" The audio is from an interview conducted in the 1990s with Father Malachi Martin.
Malachi Martin (1921 - 1999) was an Irish Catholic priest and writer on
the Catholic Church. Originally ordained as a Jesuit priest, he became
Professor of Palaeography at the Vatican's Pontifical Biblical
Institute. From 1958 he served as secretary to Cardinal Bea during
preparations for the Second Vatican Council. Disillusioned by reforms,
he asked to be released from certain of his Jesuit vows in 1964 and
moved to New York City. His 17 novels and non-fiction books were
frequently critical of the Catholic Church, which he believed had failed
to act on the third prophecy revealed by the Virgin Mary at Fátima.
His work often dealt with satanism, demonic possession, and exorcism,
liberation theology, the Second Vatican Council, the Tridentine liturgy,
Catholic dogma, modernism, the financial history of the Church, the New
World Order and the geopolitical importance of the Pope. Martin
continued to offer Mass privately each day in the Tridentine Mass form,
and vigorously exercised his priestly ministry all the way up until his
death. He was strongly supported by some traditional Catholic sources
and severely criticized by highly liberal sources. He was a periodic
guest on Art Bell's radio program, Coast to Coast AM, between 1995 and
1998. In the final years before his death, Martin was received in a
private audience by Pope John Paul II. Afterwards, he started working
on a book with the working title Primacy: How the Institutional Roman
Catholic Church became a Creature of the New World Order.
I recently did a talk with the man interviewing Fr. Martin in this video (Bernard Janzen)