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Thursday, September 6, 2018

PETER WOLFGANG MAY WELL HAVE SEVERAL GOOD POINTS! WHAT DO YOU THINK ? 🤔

Perhaps God Did Want Pope Benedict to Resign

Last week the former Vatican ambassador to the United States accused Pope Francis and senior Vatican officials of covering up sexual abuse by Cardinal Theodore McCarrick. Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò also alleged that a pro-homosexual cabal had taken control of episcopal appointments. And he called upon Pope Francis to resign.
“If only we had been given a sign,” joked Catholic Vote’s Joshua Mercer. Accompanying his comment was a photo of lightning hitting the dome of St. Peter’s the day Pope Benedict announced he would resign.
He thinks Benedict should not have resigned. That God did not want Francis to be pope the last five years. Viganò’s letter proves it.
My reaction was the exact opposite.

God Did Tell Him

It was the first time in five years that I truly believed that God really did tell Pope Benedict to resign. When Benedict shocked the world in 2013 with the first papal resignation since before Columbus discovered America, he said that God had told him to resign and that he was completely at peace with it.
He has never expressed any doubt about that. But many of us have. The last five years have been a time of great confusion in the life of the Church.
There have been dark moments when we have wondered, to borrow a phrase (and again, a joke from Josh) whether “the Benedict Option” was really “the Quitter Option.” Perhaps God had not wanted the Francis pontificate but (at least) five more years of Benedict’s.
I wondered too, until the Viganò letter. Now, for the first time, I truly believe the last five years have played out according to God’s plan. Here’s why.

I Believe Benedict

Benedict said he was resigning because he was too old. Some claimed he was resigning because he got a report revealing the full extent of the Vatican’s pro-gay cabal.
I believe both those things. I think Benedict read the report and decided he lacked the strength to clean house at the Vatican. So he resigned.
Benedict likely thought that his resignation would lead to the election of a young Pope with the strength to clean house in Rome. He was not entirely wrong. God is using his resignation to clean up his Church. Just not in the way that was expected.
“For nothing is hid that shall not be made manifest, nor anything secret that shall not be known and come to light”
Had Benedict continued to reign as Pope these last five years, the things alleged in Viganò’s letter about corruption at the Vatican might never have come to light. There may have been a sacking of a bishop here, a re-assigning of one there. But we would never have learned the full extent of it.
Instead, because of how Francis has managed the Catholic Church these last five years, we now have the Viganò letter. It is all out in the open.

It Was God’s Will, After All

I now see it as God’s will. Just as Benedict did five years ago. And I am not the only one. Last year Fr. Thomas Weinandy, the former U.S. Bishops’ head of doctrine, wrote an open letter to Pope Francis. He objected to the confusion in the Church that had occurred under Francis and called him to dispel it.
But in the wake of the Viganò testimony, it is the end of his letter that is most striking. He begins by asking why Jesus let this happen. “The only answer that comes to mind is that Jesus wants to manifest just how weak is the faith of many within the Church, even among too many of her bishops,” he writes.
Ironically, your pontificate has given those who hold harmful theological and pastoral views the license and confidence to come into the light and expose their previously hidden darkness. In recognizing this darkness, the Church will humbly need to renew herself, and so continue to grow in holiness.
He concluded: “Holy Father, I pray for you constantly and will continue to do so. May the Holy Spirit lead you to the light of truth and the life of love so that you can dispel the darkness that now hides the beauty of Jesus’ Church.”
As we now know, that darkness is not only doctrinal. But doctrinal, moral and criminal darkness all hang together. And God is exposing it all. “For nothing is hid that shall not be made manifest, nor anything secret that shall not be known and come to light” (Luke 8:17 RSV).

The Lightning

The lightning that hit St. Peter’s dome the night of Benedict’s announcement was not, I believe, a sign of God’s displeasure. It was, rather the lightning of Luke 17:24, as described in the Battle Hymn of the Republic: “He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible swift sword: His truth is marching on.” May that lightning now cleanse His Church.
Thank you, Pope Benedict, for bringing the lightning.

9 comments:

TJM said...

This might get PF's attention:

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/breaking-catholic-ceos-group-legatus-withholds-vatican-tithe-cites-recent-r

$$$$

Dan said...

The Francis don't want no stinking capitalist money! Oh wait, he probably does....

60's Observer said...

I am with Wolfgang. Of course, no decent Catholic wants his Church to look badly, but this is the ONLY way the filth is going to be excised. Many Catholics, myself included, are rejoicing that this stuff is finally starting to come into the harsh light of scrutiny. You wanted a liberal Church? Fine, then let's publicly let everyone know what the beliefs and "fruits" are of such a Church ("fruits of the fruits in charge"). If such "Catholics" can defend their vision of a Church after this is over with, let them be Episcopalians.

Of course, if this problem is as widespread as many allege, we're probably going to have a serious bishop shortage when it's all over with. Then again, with the kind of bishops we've had for the last 20-30 years, would that be such a bad thing?

Joseph Johnson said...

60's Observer/Wolfgang:
Regarding the serious bishop shortage: Yes, but think of the generation of priests that will likely move up the totem pole to replace them (hopefully, more guys like Sample and Cordileone).

Dan said...

60's observer... the problem is that this "catholic" church wants to liberalize and then "absorb" the liberal wings of the Episcopal and Lutheran churches...AND it doesn't mind alienating us and leaving us with no where to go.

TJM said...

I guess these Francis apologists would be rooting for Rodrigo Borgia if he was pope now. Notwithstanding Borgia's "indiscretions" he was an orthodox catholic when teaching the Faith.

Православный физик said...

The borgias were at least Catholic ;)...

Pope Benedict could barely hold the crosier during his last public Mass (still managed to genuflect though in spite of this)...it's pretty hard not to take the pope at his words just observing him.

Anonymous said...

While it is only speculation, there is the possibility that Benedict faux-abdicated to permit the jackals to rise to power and expose themselves. Abp. Ganswein has indicated that P. Benedict intended to partially abdicate, thus bifurcating the papacy into a contemplative and an active/administrative ministry. This argument was probably made in response to some questions raised over whether the Latin text of P. Benedict was a true resignation.

I do not believe it was ever his intent to bifurcate something that cannot be bifurcated, but perhaps it was God's will for him to withdraw to solitude while retaining the papacy through the appearance of an abdication in order to permit his adversaries to, in their arrogance, conspire to place one of their own on the throne and shamelessly admit their intention to remake the Church in their own image. In their pride, they boldly preach another gospel. This contrast allows the faithful to choose, thus creating a smaller Church, but more faithful.

I know I'm stringing together several things here, but I find it to be more palatable than the thought of our Lord's true vicar promoting another gospel. I could be wrong on specifics, but no doubt, P. Benedict has brought the lightning. God bless him for it. I do not think he resigned out of cowardice. The contrast between our Lord's words and some of the things coming out of Rome lately have certainly caused me to work harder at knowing and loving my faith. I am grateful for that.

Steven

Anonymous said...

Noted.

Amen.

BCK. Military Medal. Military Medal with.... Retired, NSW, Australia.