Deception of Francis: The Dream of Nabuchodonosor
Note: TCK does not hold Francis as the true Pope
In my conversion story, titled Beauty,
I omitted one significant event leading to my conversion. It now seems
to me singularly appropriate to relate this experience in the light of
the pontificate of Pope Francis, and the crisis in the Church of which
this pontificate is now the most visible and obvious sign of our
chastisement.
Between the time when I first began to pray to
God that He might show Himself to me, and the events which finally led
to my conversion, my wife and I began to attend a Catholic charismatic
prayer group. I do not intend here to enter into an analysis as to
what extent this movement might be from God or the Devil, or whether it
might be largely a matter of psychological and emotional
self-deception. Suffice to say that I now am deeply averse to it, but
at the same time not unsympathetic towards the aspirations and good
will of its followers. And, I must add that I know that God can draw
good out from the midst of superficiality, error, and even evil.
It was (and probably still is) an essential
practice of the Charismatic Movement to hold what they term “Life in
the Spirit Seminars” which culminated in laying on of the hands and
prayer for the “Gift of the Spirit” for the individual candidate. This
ceremony was conducted in a separate room with only chosen leaders and
the candidate present. Before the laying on of hands, we were
instructed to pray privately for one of the charismatic “Gifts of the
Spirit” as enumerated in 1 Corinthians 12. I did not pray for any of
these gifts. Rather, very specifically, I prayed “to be completely
burned of self.”
There is no question in my mind that my prayer
was answered in a supernatural manner. What I experienced after coming
out of that room was no natural state of mind or feeling, even of the
most extreme variety. I know that it sounds contradictory: but it was a
matter of combining acute self-consciousness with total awareness of
my own nothingness — a personal desolation to which not any of the
other deep desolations in my life can be even remotely compared. I can
only repeat that it was not “natural”.
After leaving that room I went to be with
others who had attended the Seminar, and who were now waiting for Mass
to begin. I remember sitting there, and thinking “What do I do now?”
The answer came in what I can now only consider to have been a
supernatural grace through my own thought: “I am totally nothing, but I
have absolutely nowhere else to go. I am therefore Yours to do with as
You will.” I must add that this thought was not exercised with any
consoling thoughts or feelings about God. It was just there.
The overwhelming effects of this experience
persisted for some time, but of course over the next several days or
weeks I returned to what would be termed normal, if life with egotism
can be termed normal. Over the years, however, I have come to realise
the extraordinary foundation which this experience established within
me in regard to my own personal faith. It is now as though every scandal
may come, every consolation be stripped away, and every chastisement
befall the Church and the world, and yet I experience no temptation
against the Faith, and no confusion in regard to the present crisis
within the Church. My only confusion is in regard to my own failure to
live what I know. It is as though a band of security has been placed
around my mind, but not my flesh.
The King's Dream
This experience profoundly resonated in my own
mind and heart with the biblical account of the dream of the
Babylonian King Nabuchodonosor, and its interpretation and fulfillment,
as related in Daniel 4. And, over the years, this account of
Nabuchodonosor’s fall and resurrection has come to image to me the
descent of the Church into the chaos of its own chastisement, and
eventual rebirth in triumph. I will therefore spend some amount of
space and time in relating this dream, its interpretation by Daniel,
and fulfillment.
Nabuchodonosor, in his dreams, beheld a vision
of a great tree whose height reached unto heaven and seemed to extend
over the entire earth: “Its leaves were most beautiful, and its fruit
exceeding much: and in it was food for all: under it dwelt cattle, and
beasts, and in the branches thereof the fowls of the air had their
abode; and all flesh did eat of it.”
While watching this vision, the King also saw “a watcher, and a holy one came down from heaven” who cried aloud,
Cut down the tree, and chop off the
branches thereof: shake off its leaves, and scatter its fruits: let the
beasts fly away that are under it, and the birds from its branches.
Nevertheless leave the stump of its roots in the earth, and let it be
tied with a band of iron, and of brass, among the grass that is
without, and let it be wet with the dew of heaven, and let its portion
be with the wild beasts in the grass of the earth. Let his heart be
changed from man’s and let a beast’s heart be given him; and let seven
times [years] pass over him.
Daniels' Warning
None of the wise men in Nabuchodonosor’s
kingdom could interpret the dream. Finally he called to him Daniel who,
after pondering the dream for an hour, warned him that the dream “be
[favourable] to them that hate thee, and the interpretation thereof to
thy enemies”, and proceeded to interpret it as follows:
It is thou, O king, who art grown great
and mighty: for thy greatness hath grown, and hath reached to heaven,
and thy power unto the ends of the earth. And whereas the king saw a
watcher, and a holy one come down from heaven, and say 'cut down the
tree and destroy it, but leave the stump of the roots thereof in the
earth, and let it be bound with iron and brass among the grass without,
and let it be sprinkled with the dew of heaven, and let his feeding be
with the wild beasts, till seven times pass over him.' This is the
interpretation of the sentence of the most High, which is come upon my
lord my king.
They shall cast thee out from among men,
and thy dwelling shall be with cattle and with wild beasts, and thou
shalt eat grass as an ox, and shalt be wet with the dew of heaven: and
seven times shall pass over thee, till thou know that the most High
ruleth over the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomsoever he will.
But whereas he commanded that the stump
of the roots thereof, that is, of the tree, should be left: thy kingdom
shall remain to thee after thou shalt have known that power is from
heaven.
Wherefore, O king, let my counsel be
acceptable to thee, and redeem thou thy sins with alms, and thy
iniquities with works of mercy to the poor: perhaps he will forgive thy
offences.
The Analogical Thread: "Nothingness" Without God
King Nabuchodonosor did not heed Daniel’s
warning. At the end of twelve months, while walking in the palace of
Babylon and contemplating his kingdom, “built … by the strength of my
power, and in the glory of my excellence”, it came about by God’s decree
that “he was driven away from among men, and did eat grass like an ox,
and his body was wet with the dew of heaven: till his hairs grew like
the feathers of eagle, and his nails like birds’ claws.”
Shortly after my own experience described
above, I related it to an acquaintance who was instrumental in my first
beginning to pray, and I told him that it made me feel a strong
affinity for the description of Nabuchodonosor rendered above.
Unbeknownst to me, he was an artist, and returned with a drawing
depicting Nabuchodonosor sitting naked among the grasses with his hair
like eagle feathers, dew upon his body, and long claws for fingernails.
But it was the eyes which were haunting. They reflected the total loss
of a “man’s heart”, and its transformation into the heart of a beast.
The picture depicted not an evil beast, but only a man that had become a
beast through loss of human heart and reason. It was an icon of
spiritual madness.
An analogous affinity can be seen between many
souls throughout history and the state of King Nabuchodonosor in his
desolation. These analogies would of course always be only partial. I,
for instance, in my own personal experience did not lose my reason, and
my own personal devastation came about not against my will, but in
accordance with my request. But, nevertheless, it is the experience of
the “nothingness” of man apart from God which forms the common thread
of analogy.
The "Stump" of Grace: Gratuitous and Efficacious
St. Peter, who had brazenly proclaimed that he
would never deny Christ, denied Him three times and vehemently
proclaimed, “I know not the man!” The desolation and self-loathing
which he must have experienced in denying God could easily have led him
to total self-destruction, as it did Judas. But as St. Theophylus said
of Peter’s descent: “For albeit thou art for a time shaken, yet thou
holdest stored up, a seed of faith; though the spirit has shed its
leaves in temptation, yet the root is firm.” The tree had lost
everything which would naturally preserve its life, but the stump was,
in accordance with God’s providence, protected from destruction.
What is most mysterious in the account of Nabuchodonosor’s descent into spiritual madness is the phrase, “Nevertheless leave the stump of its roots in the earth, and let it be tied with a band of iron, and of brass."
This “band of iron and of brass” speaks of some sort of divine
intervention, or of what theologians call efficacious grace. It
accomplishes the preservation of a seed of spiritual integrity which,
while not under the power of man to do, yet does not violate his free
will. It is truly gratuitous and efficacious. In fact, what newly
arises from this “stump” is somehow glorious, transformative, and far
superseding what came before.
The "Stump" of Israel
Pre-eminent among such stumps (or “roots”) in
all of salvation history is that of Jesse, father of King David. The
temporal line of Kings of Judah (the line of Jesse) ended with King
Sedecias in 587 B.C., when Jerusalem was captured by Nabuchodonosor, the
temple was burned, the Ark of the Covenant disappeared, and Judah was
reduced to a province of the Babylonian Kingdom. But out of the root of
Jesse, in the line of David, would rise the Incarnation and the
spiritual Kingdom of Jesus Christ:
And there shall come forth a rod out of the root [or “stump“] of Jesse, and a flower shall rise up out of his root. [Is. 11:1]
It is quite worthwhile to ponder the extent to
which the faith of the Jewish people, on the eve of the Incarnation,
had been reduced to a “stump”. To all external evidence, the promises
made by God to the people of Israel had failed. God had promised an
eternal covenant with the people of Israel, that they would triumph
over their enemies, and that the throne of David would endure forever.
All of this was apparently destroyed. God was to be seen nowhere, the
Jews were under the heels of the Romans, the Davidic throne
non-existent. Moreover, the very centre of God’s presence with His
people — the Ark of the Covenant — was gone. To all external
appearances, the faith of the Jews was reduced, in analogy, to a sort
of Nabuchodonosorian absurdity, and even madness, which of course is
precisely how the Romans viewed this people.
In this regard it is worthwhile to consider
the seemingly almost miraculous “root” present not only in Mary and
Joseph, but also in other New Testament faithful — people like
Nicodemus, Gamaliel, or Joseph of Arimathea. They cried out to God in
their desolation, they waited, they “possessed their
souls in patience”, they prayed. It is impossible not to see God’s
efficacious grace as providential in all this preservation of faith in
the midst of overwhelming darkness.
The "Stump" of the Church
The parallels that can be drawn between the
“reduced” state of the Jews and the current state of the Catholic
Church, especially (but certainly not exclusively) during the 3-year
old Papacy of Francis, are striking. Virtually everything Catholic seems
in the process of being turned upside down. Pope Francis’ denigration
of traditional Catholicism and Catholics; his rampant promotion of a
false ecumenism; his denial of the Catholic Church’s commission to
convert people of other religions, and even atheists, to Catholicism:
his promotion of a false mercy at the expense of Catholic truth and the
integrity of the sacraments; his promotion of an ecological pantheism
in Laudato Si, in imitation of Teilhardian theology — all of
these policies, and more, are tremendously disintegrating to Catholic
identity. On the surface, they can very easily speak of a failure of
God’s promises to His Church.
Satanic Deceit: From Conflict to Communion
Possibly no single event will more clearly
unite all the elements of this Catholic disintegration than Pope
Francis’ scheduled visit to Lund, Sweden on October 31, 2016 in order to
kick off a year-long celebration honouring Martin Luther and the
Protestant Revolution (culminating on Oct 31, 2017 — the 500th
anniversary of Luther’s nailing his 95 Theses to the door of the
Wittenberg Castle Church).
Along with Lutheran World Federation President
Bishop Dr. Munib A. Younan and General Secretary Rev. Dr. Martin
Junge, the Pope will lead an Ecumenical Commemoration and common
worship service in Lund Cathedral — based on the Catholic-Lutheran Common Prayer,
released in January 2016 by both the Pontifical Council for Promoting
Christian Unity (PCPCU) and the Lutheran World Federation (LWF). This Common Prayer, in turn, “follows directly” from the publication in 2013 of the document titled From Conflict to Communion (the fruit of 50 years of ecumenical dialogue between the PCPCU and LWF). The Common Prayer praises
Luther and “the many guiding theological and spiritual insights that
we have all received through the Reformation”, and commits both
Catholics and Lutherans to the premier guiding principle that all
future relations should “begin from the perspective of unity and not
from the point of view of division….”
From Conflict to Communion is, in my estimation, the most satanically deceitful document ever to issue forth from a Vatican office.
The extent of this deceit, spread over the space of approximately 50
pages, would certainly require a book for full exposition. But the
foundations, and principle elements of this deceit, are easily exposed
in a few pages. This I will attempt to do below.
The False Guiding Principle
We must first dispose of the false principle
stated repeatedly in this document, and also listed as the first
principle in the Common Prayer, that all future relations
between Catholics and Lutherans “should always begin from the
perspective of unity and not from the point of division…”. This might
indeed be a valid guiding principle if, as the document claims, “the
things that unite us are greater than those that divide us”, but this
is simply false. Let us consider the following three points about
which, in its rush to embrace a false sense of unity, the document From Conflict to Communion is shamefully silent:
1) The Lutheran Church is not Apostolic and therefore in no way a “part” of the One Mystical Body of Christ.
2) The Lutheran Church does
not have valid ordinations and therefore cannot confect the Eucharist,
offer valid sacramental Confessions, Holy Orders, Confirmations, or the
Sacrament of Supreme Unction.
In consideration of the above two points, we
are able to immediately point out the absurdity of the principle that
“we must begin with what unites us rather than what divides”. The
Protestant Revolution almost immediately severed one-half of Europe from
the fullness of Truth guaranteed by Christ as integral to the
Apostolic Tradition, and it severed the Sacramental Life of Christ from
all those who revolted. We are here speaking about the loss of
sanctifying grace to millions of souls. And this “divisive” aspect of
the “Reformation” has now been multiplied to an immeasurable degree. To
gloss over all of this, to never mention it, and to place “what unites
us” at the forefront, involves not only the most profound deception
but also a horrendous sin and violation of the fundamental principles
of charity and mercy: towards those souls who are suffering under these
deceptions and deprivations.
3) It must be pointed out that the document From Conflict to Communion deals
very specifically, and somewhat extensively, with the following
doctrines: Justification; Eucharist (including the concepts of Real
Presence and Sacrifice), Ministry; and Scripture and tradition (the
document always uses the lower-case “t”). In obscuring and falsifying
the radical divide between Catholic and Lutheran theology in regard to
every one of these doctrines, the authors are always faced with the
“hard” and substantive definitions and anathemas of Trent. This is
especially true of the Tridentine Canons concerning Justification
(canon after canon is clearly directed towards condemning the teachings
of Luther), and the Eucharist. From Conflict to Communion therefore
finds it necessary, from the very beginning of all of its discussion
regarding the above-listed doctrines, to establish the following
principle as the foundation of its aberrant conclusions:
While the Council of Trent largely defined Catholic relations with Lutherans for several centuries, its legacy must now be viewed through the lens of the actions of the Second Vatican Council. This Council made it possible for the Catholic Church to enter the ecumenical movement and leave behind the charged polemic atmosphere of the post-Reformation era. [paragraph 90] [emphasis mine]
In other words, this document would reduce the
doctrinal definitions and condemnations of the Council of Trent to an
historically-conditioned polemic, which has little or no binding force
on modern Catholics or others. We are, in other words, here faced with
emphatic denial of the binding dogmatic teachings of the Council of
Trent. In doing so, the document From Conflict to Communion, and its perpetrators, thus also find themselves in direct contradiction to the following doctrinal teaching of
Vatican Council I:
Vatican Council I:
For the doctrine of faith which God has
revealed has not been proposed, like a philosophical invention, to be
perfected by human ingenuity; but has been delivered as a divine
deposit to the Spouse of Christ, to be faithfully kept and infallibly
declared. Hence, also, that meaning of the sacred dogmas is perpetually
to be retained which our holy Mother the Church has once declared; nor
is that meaning ever to be departed from, under the pretense or pretext
of a deeper comprehension of them (can. iii).
The Lutheran Revolt
The genesis of Luther’s revolt is to be found
in his personal despair in regard to his own ability or power to
cooperate with God’s grace, not only in living the moral law, but also
the rules and disciplines of his own Augustinian Order. His entire
theological system is therefore rooted in the theological principle of
justification which is expressed as “Faith Alone”.
In his own translation of the Bible he in fact inserted the word alone into Romans 3:28, so that it read:
For we account a man to be justified by faith alone, without the works of the law.
The word is simply not there. Nor can the
words “without the works of the Law” be interpreted to mean “faith
alone”. Under the New Law of the Gospel, man was indeed freed, through
faith, from obeying all the ritualistic prescriptions, etc. of the Old
Law. But this does not mean that he was freed from the Ten
Commandments, the moral law of the New Testament, or the ability and
obligation to exercise his free will in order to cooperate with God’s
grace in living these laws and truths. Luther denied all this, and in
fact labelled the Epistle of St. James as an “epistle of straw”. It is
James, of course, who declared that “faith without works is dead.” Luther, in his writings also made the following statements:
"It is more important to guard against good works than against sin."
"This is Christian liberty…that we stand in need of no works for the attainment of piety and salvation."
"The very best good work is a venial sin
according to God's merciful judgment, and a mortal sin according to
His strict judgment."
"He that says the Gospel requires works for salvation, I say, flat and plain, is a liar."
"If Moses should attempt to intimidate
you with his stupid Ten Commandments, tell him right out — chase
yourself to the Jews."
“The nature of man is so corrupted that
it can never be regenerated, and sin will remain in the soul, even of
the just, forever. God’s all-powerful grace does not cleanse from sin.
The Almighty does not regard the sins of men. He covers them over with
the merits of Christ and does not impute them to the sinner whose faith
in the sufferings of the Redeemer is made manifest.”
All this, of course, necessitates a denial of
free will and its efficacy in cooperating with God’s grace. Luther wrote
a book (directed against the philosopher Erasmus), titled The Slavery (or Bondage) of the Will, entirely devoted to this subject. His view on free will is perhaps most succinctly expressed in the following passage:
So man’s will is like a beast standing
between two riders. If God rides, it wills and goes where God wills: as
the Psalm says, ‘I am become as a beast before thee, and I am ever
with thee.’ (Ps. 73: 22-3). If Satan rides, it wills and goes where
Satan wills. Nor may it choose to which rider it will run, or which it
will seek; but the riders themselves fight to decide who shall have and
hold it. (II, viii)
Luther believed God’s power to be infinite, so
the “fight” between God and Satan mentioned above is only a metaphor
disguising the fact that Luther believed that God was the author of all
evil as well as good. In other words, in denying free will, Luther, out
of logical necessity, made God the author of all sin. He, in fact,
stated that God was the author of Judas’ sin.
I would add that some years ago I studied
Luther in depth, and the above statements are indeed only a fraction of
what might be related. Anyone who undertakes any sort serious
examination of his writings is bound to encounter these sorts of
statements in abundance.
The Corrective Canons of Trent
We must, however, return to the point with
which I began this analysis: the denial of the Dogmas of the Council of
Trent which is at the root of From Conflict to Communion. The
Decree on Justification of the Council of Trent contains the following
Canons, all of which are to be seen as specifically directed against
Martin Luther and Lutheranism. I am quoting quite a few of them in
order to strongly emphasise the absurdities involved in any notion that
there is any true unity possible between Catholic and Lutheran thought
on the subject of Justification. Further, any attempt to reduce these
Canons to historically conditioned polemics is indeed a work which is in alignment with Satan’s goal to undermine all of Catholic doctrine:
Canon 4. If anyone
says that man's free will moved and aroused by God, by assenting to
God's call and action, in no way cooperates toward disposing and
preparing itself to obtain the grace of justification, that it cannot
refuse its assent if it wishes, but that, as something inanimate, it
does nothing whatever and is merely passive, let him be anathema.
Canon 5. If anyone says
that after the sin of Adam man's free will was lost and destroyed, or
that it is a thing only in name, indeed a name without a reality, a
fiction introduced into the Church by Satan, let him be anathema.
Canon 6. If anyone says
that it is not in man's power to make his ways evil, but that the works
that are evil as well as those that are good God produces, not
permissively only but also propria et per se, so that the treason of
Judas is no less His own proper work than the vocation of St. Paul, let him be anathema.
Canon 7. If anyone says
that all works done before justification, in whatever manner they may
be done, are truly sins, or merit the hatred of God; that the more
earnestly one strives to dispose himself for grace, the more grievously
he sins, let him be anathema.
Canon 8. If anyone says
that the fear of hell, whereby, by grieving for sins, we flee to the
mercy of God or abstain from sinning, is a sin or makes sinners worse, let him be anathema.
Canon 9. If anyone says
that the sinner is justified by faith alone, meaning that nothing else
is required to cooperate in order to obtain the grace of justification,
and that it is not in any way necessary that he be prepared and
disposed by the action of his own will, let him be anathema. [This Canon is probably the most succinct as being relevant to our analysis here]
Canon 11. If anyone says
that men are justified either by the sole imputation of the justice of
Christ or by the sole remission of sins, to the exclusion of the grace
and the charity which is poured forth in their hearts by the Holy
Ghost, and remains in them, or also that the grace by which we are
justified is only the good will of God, let him be anathema.
Canon 12. If anyone says
that justifying faith is nothing else than confidence in divine mercy,
which remits sins for Christ's sake, or that it is this confidence
alone that justifies us, let him be anathema.
Canon 13. If anyone says
that in order to obtain the remission of sins it is necessary for
every man to believe with certainty and without any hesitation arising
from his own weakness and indisposition that his sins are forgiven him,
let him be anathema.
Canon 14. If anyone says
that man is absolved from his sins and justified because he firmly
believes that he is absolved and justified, or that no one is truly
justified except him who believes himself justified, and that by this
faith alone absolution and justification are effected, let him be anathema.
Canon 18. If anyone says
that the commandments of God are, even for one that is justified and
constituted in grace, impossible to observe, let him be anathema.
Canon 19. If anyone says
that nothing besides faith is commanded in the Gospel, that other
things are indifferent, neither commanded nor forbidden, but free; or
that the ten commandments in no way pertain to Christians, let him be anathema.
Canon 20. If anyone says
that a man who is justified and however perfect is not bound to
observe the commandments of God and the Church, but only to believe, as
if the Gospel were a bare and absolute promise of eternal life without
the condition of observing the commandments, let him be anathema.
Canon 21. If anyone says
that Christ Jesus was given by God to men as a redeemer in whom to
trust, and not also as a legislator whom to obey, let him be anathema.
Canon 24. If anyone says
that the justice received is not preserved and also not increased
before God through good works, but that those works are merely the
fruits and signs of justification obtained, but not the cause of its
increase, let him be anathema.
Canon 25. If anyone says
that in every good work the just man sins at least venially, or, what
is more intolerable, mortally, and hence merits eternal punishment, and
that he is not damned for this reason only, because God does not
impute these works into damnation, let him be anathema.
Canon 26. If anyone says
that the just ought not for the good works done in God to expect and
hope for an eternal reward from God through His mercy and the merit of
Jesus Christ, if by doing well and by keeping the divine commandments
they persevere to the end, let him be anathema.
Canon 27. If anyone says
that there is no mortal sin except that of unbelief, or that grace
once received is not lost through any other sin however grievous and
enormous except by that of unbelief, let him be anathema.
Canon 31. If anyone says that the one justified sins when he performs good works with a view to an eternal reward, let him be anathema.
Canon 32. If anyone says
that the good works of the one justified are in such manner the gifts
of God that they are not also the good merits of him justified; or that
the one justified by the good works that he performs by the grace of
God and the merit of Jesus Christ, whose living member he is, does not
truly merit an increase of grace, eternal life, and in case he dies in
grace, the attainment of eternal life itself and also an increase of
glory, let him be anathema.
Canon 33. If anyone says
that the Catholic doctrine of justification as set forth by the holy
council in the present decree, derogates in some respect from the glory
of God or the merits of our Lord Jesus Christ, and does not rather
illustrate the truth of our faith and no less the glory of God and of
Christ Jesus, let him be anathema.
In other words, the exercise of man’s free will is necessary for cooperating with the graces which lead to justification; necessary in cooperating with the grace of justification itself; necessary for persevering in Faith and good works, both of which are necessary for salvation; and necessary for performance of those good works which merit an increase of glory in eternal life.
Luther denied all of these Catholic doctrines.
Luther’s entire theory of Justification
therefore made man totally depraved, and in so doing, blasphemed God
Who created man in His own Image.
We need to note that, in “derogating” from
these dogmatically binding teachings of Trent, and claiming a unity
where there is no unity, it might well be concluded that the authors of From Conflict to Communion are subject to the anathema pronounced by Canon 33.
Deceitful Lutherans
It is also abundantly clear that the deceit
involved in the “unity” which is now alleged to exist between Catholics
and Lutherans on the subject of Justification is equally present on
the Lutheran side.
Lutheranism (of all varieties) is a
“Confessional Faith”, involving “Confessional Documents” which must be
adhered to in order to be considered a Lutheran. Premier among these
Confessional Documents is the Solid Declaration of the Formula of Concord,
published in 1580 (and signed by 8,188 theologians, ministers, and
teachers). It was promulgated in order to clarify and purify the
formulation of the dogmas of Lutheranism in the light of many
disagreements and theological differences which had arisen in the
aftermath of previous documents, especially the Augsburg Confession of
Philip Melanchthon.
Article II of the Solid Declaration is entirely on Free Will, and contains the following Declaration in paragraphs 6-7:
In order to settle this controversy in a
Christian way according to the Word of God, and by God’s grace to
bring it to an end, we submit the following as our teaching, belief and
confession:
“We believe that in spiritual and divine
things the intellect, heart, and will of unregenerated man cannot by
any native or natural powers, in any way understand, believe, accept,
imagine, will, begin, accomplish, do, effect, or cooperate,
but that man is entirely and completely dead and corrupted as far as
anything good is concerned. Accordingly, we believe that after the Fall
and prior to his conversion not a spark of spiritual powers has
remained or exists in man by which he could make himself ready for the
grace of God or to accept the proffered grace, nor that he has any
capacity for grace by and for himself or can apply himself to it or
prepare himself for it, or help, do, effect, or cooperate towards
his conversion by his own powers, either altogether or half-way or in
the tiniest or smallest degree, ‘of himself as coming from himself,’
but is a slave of sin (John 8:34), the captive of the devil who drives
him (Eph. 2:2; II Tim. 2:26). Hence according to its perverse
disposition and nature the natural free will is mighty and active only
in the direction of that which is displeasing and contrary to God.
[Emphasis mine].
As I have said, a book could be written concerning the errors present in the Vatican document From Conflict to Communion.
Suffice here to point out that Luther, in falsifying the most
fundamental doctrine of Justification, was bound to falsify virtually
everything else. The doctrine of Justification necessitates a true
understanding of Who God is, who man is, and their proper relationship.
Once these basic concepts are falsified, all the integrated and
interwoven truths of our Faith are bound to crumble or become
perverted.
Long Papal Pedigree
It must also be understood that the document From Conflict to Communion is
not essentially the product of Pope Francis’ pontificate. It is the
fruit of 50 years of ecumenical prostitution, and was released only 4
months after the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. Cardinal Koch,
President of the Pontifical Council and the man responsible for
promulgating this document, was appointed to his position by Pope
Benedict on June 1, 2010. Its teaching on Justification was in fact
almost wholly the result of the document Joint Declaration on Justification issued
in 1999, under the pontificate of John Paul II. This was a project
long in the making, and receiving the blessings of several pontiffs.
We have been rightly very concerned about Pope
Francis’s support of pastoral efforts which would undermine the
Sacrament of Matrimony, and promote Eucharistic sacrilege. But what
will be happening in Lund, Sweden can be seen as a much deeper assault
upon the Catholic Faith. Even though no doctrine is to be promulgated,
and the Infallible Magisterium will remain intact, the blessing and
leadership which the Pope will be exercising over this event undermines
the deepest roots of Our Faith. The deleterious effects which this
will exercise upon the whole Church cannot be overestimated.
"Communion" with Decadence and Heresy?
The pathos of this coming “Commemoration” is
only increased by considering its location. The event will be held in
the Lund Lutheran Cathedral, which was stolen from the Catholic Church
and desecrated in approximately the year 1530. Sweden is one of the most
irreligious countries in the world. A 2009 Gallup poll found that only
17% of the Swedish population considered religion as an important part
of their daily life. The Lutheran Church is looked upon as a national
Church, and until the year 2000 held the position of the official state
church. The number of listed members is high because until 1996 all
newborn children were registered as members unless their parents had
actively cancelled their membership. Only 2% of registered members
regularly attend Sunday services.
Theologically, the Lutheran Church of Sweden
is considered extremely liberal. Women have been ordained as priests
since 1960, the “Primate” is a woman, and in 2009 the performance of
same-sex weddings was approved. A second woman Bishop, Eva Brunne
(Bishop of Stockholm), is “married” to a fellow woman priest and is (or
was) the world’s first openly lesbian bishop within a mainline
Christian denomination. She and her partner have a son, who I believe
is now 10 years old. Her episcopal motto is “Don’t show favouritism.”
In September of 2015, Bishop Brunne attained worldwide notoriety for
proposing that the Seaman’s Church in Stockholm Harbour remove all
Christian symbols, including crosses (so as not to offend incoming
Moslems), and replacing them with directions to Mecca.
The Pope seeking any sort of “communion” with such decadence and heresy is indeed spiritual madness.
Infidelity as Prostitution and Harlotry
There is a parallel that can be seen between
the present condition of the Catholic Church and that of the Jews
previous to the destruction of their nation, and their being taken into
Babylonian captivity.
The Jews had been recipients of extraordinary
gifts from God, including the promise of protection from, and victory
over, all their enemies. Such gifts were conditional upon them placing
their faith and trust exclusively in Him. The response of both Israel
and Judah was to reject this gift and seek help through all sorts of
diplomacy and alliances with pagan neighbours and countries, especially
great powers such as the Egyptians, Assyrians, and Chaldeans. This of
course led to all sorts of horrendous sins: worshipping of their idols,
sacrificing their children to these idols, fornicating with their
women, etc. All this diplomacy and “dialogue” was simply infidelity and
harlotry in the face of God. The words of the prophets are horrendous
in their condemnations:
For my people have done two evils. They
have forsaken me, the fountain of living water, and have digged to
themselves cisterns, broken cisterns, that can hold no water. (Jer.
2:13)
But thou hast prostituted thyself to many
lovers: nevertheless return to me, saith the Lord, and I will receive
thee. (Jer. 3:1).
The consistent image for this infidelity is always prostitution and harlotry:
For on every high hill, and under every green tree thou didst prostitute thyself. (Jer. 2:20)
This prostitution always entails the loss of good “pastors”, and the scattering of the flock:
Because the pastors have done foolishly,
and have not sought the Lord: therefore have they not understood, and
all their flock is scattered. (Jer. 10:21)
This turning away from God and towards the
world (especially towards nations and religions which traditionally have
warred against God and His people) in search of peace and mercy always
ends in exposing the spiritual nakedness of God’s people, and effects
the opposite: the withdrawal of God’s peace, mercy, and healing:
I have taken away my peace from this people, saith the Lord, my mercy and commiserations. (Jer. 16:5).
Behold, I will gather together all thy
lovers with whom thou hast taken pleasure, and all whom thou hast loved,
with all whom thou hast hated: and I will gather them against thee on
every side, and I will discover thy shame in their sight, and they
shall see all thy nakedness…. Because thou hast not remembered the days
of thy youth, but hast provoked me in all these things: wherefore I
also have turned thy ways upon thy head…. (Ezekiel 16:37-43).
Triumphant Flower of the Naked "Stump"
We see it now everywhere within the Church.
Catholics, and especially their “pastors”, lie down with those who have
hated them: Lutherans and all the various Protestant denominations,
Judaism, Islam, Eastern Orthodox, Atheists, Russia, China — all now
courted as lovers and fellow-travellers towards a Teilhardian Omega
Point of world evolution.
No one can deny that the nakedness of the
Catholic Church — spiritual, moral, and even physical — is now widely
exposed to both those who have loved and those who have hated her.
In this time of “stripping” — of Nabuchodonosorian madness — a “band of brass and of iron” has been placed around the “stump” of the Church. The flower that shall rise from these roots is the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Our salvation depends upon acquiring the spiritual childhood which follows Jesus into the refuge of Mary’s Heart.
In this time of “stripping” — of Nabuchodonosorian madness — a “band of brass and of iron” has been placed around the “stump” of the Church. The flower that shall rise from these roots is the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Our salvation depends upon acquiring the spiritual childhood which follows Jesus into the refuge of Mary’s Heart.
The doctrine of Justification,
explained so clearly and precisely in this critique, is not the only
Catholic teaching to be sold out in the document From Conflict to Communion. Other
paragraphs subvert eucharistic doctrine and the Mass. Since it is
vital that readers are informed about these particular paras and their
main objective — facilitation of inter-communion between Catholics and
Lutherans — Mr Larson will address them in October: in which month the
Pope is visiting Lund to put his seal on the destructive cause of false
unity.