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Monday, February 9, 2026

POPE BENEDICT XVI, A GREAT CANDIDATE FOR DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH, HAS GREAT ADVICE FOR POPE LEO XIV ABOUT HOW TO INCLUDE CATHOLICS, INCLUDING THE FSSPX, WHO DISAGREE WITH CERTAIN ASPECTS OF VATICAN II, TO INCLUDE THE LITURGICAL REFORM OF BUGNINI

Jesuitical Fr. James Martin, SJ sees the Church as an inclusive country club where there is no judgment on the sinner, only therapeutic acceptance without codicils. Todas, todas, todas is not accompanied by repent, repent, repent! Thus, using the twisted logic and ideology of Jesuitical Father James Martin, SJ, todas, todas, todas, as he understands it, should be applied to the FSSPX: Come as you are, we embrace you and your sins and your vision of the Catholic Church and her liturgical life. 


It is safe to assume that the FSSPX more than likely will not be fully reconciled to the Church if they have to accept all of Vatican II in an “uncritical” way or in its so-called “spirit.” I think the three issues that concern them the most are the documents of Religious Liberty and Ecumenism, not Christian religions and with the world. 

They disagree with Bugnini’s version of implementing Sacrosanctum Concilium. More than likely, Lefebrev would have been happy with the 1964/65 Roman Missal but Bugnini destroyed the good will of those who were open to what Sacrasanctum Concilium actually requested verses what Bugnini shoved down the throat of Pope Paul VI and subsequently the entire Latin Rite. 

This is from AI and would be great for Pope Leo XIV to embrace as a hermeneutic of outreach to those who dislike how Vatican II was implemented: 

Pope Benedict XVI embraced Vatican II but was intellectually capable of teaching that everything taught in the documents of Vatican II did not have the same theological weight.

but he distinguished between binding dogmatic teachings and pastoral directives, allowing for criticism of the latter's implementation. He emphasized a "hermeneutic of reform" in continuity with tradition, opposing a "hermeneutic of rupture" or a loose "spirit of Vatican II".

  • Hermeneutic of Reform: Benedict argued that Vatican II should be interpreted in light of the Church’s Tradition, rather than as a break from the past.
  • Criticism Allowed: He established that faithful Catholics could, in good conscience, criticize certain pastoral applications or "limitations" of the council, while accepting the essential doctrinal teachings.
  • The "Spirit" vs. The Texts: Benedict criticized the "bad interpretation" or the so-called "spirit of the Council," which he felt created a false, revolutionary narrative that ignored the actual documents.
  • Necessity of the Council: Despite his critiques of its implementation, he consistently maintained that the council itself was necessary and meaningful.
Ultimately, Benedict XVI viewed the council as a mix of profound doctrinal teaching and pastoral strategies that required careful, traditional interpretation rather than total, uncritical acceptance of its post-conciliar "spirit".

THIS IS GOOD NEWS

 From Facebook’s “Vocanti”:


đź”´ Leon XIV is not just appointing bishops, he is profiling a style and a way to serve in the Church.

When you look at the recent appointments of the Archbishops of New York, Westminster and Vienna together, it is clear that these are not isolated decisions or merely technical. There's an internal logic that connects them. Even more: there is a vision of the Church beginning to take shape sharply under the pontificate of Leo XIV.

These appointments constitute a model of bishop designed for a Church that can no longer be governed from theoretical abstractions, but also cannot afford to dilute its identity into soulless pragmatism. A Church that lives in the cultural climate, observed, questioned, sometimes misunderstood, but still called to proclaim the Gospel with credibility.

1. Pastors with real resumes, not office careers.

The first feature is perhaps the most eloquent. Leon XIV seems to distrust — or at least relativize — the model of bishop built exclusively in the curial or academic circuits, far from the territory. There is no rejection of intellectual competition, but a clear hierarchy: pastoral experience first, then everything else.

Hicks, GrĂĽnwidl and Moth share a decisive characteristic: they have spent years governing specific communities, facing internal tensions, accompanying tired clergy, managing the scarcity of vocations, and measuring each decision with the real limits of church life. They are field proven bishops not theory.

A silent but firm twist is seen here: Lion XIV seems to prefer pastors who have learned to govern from lived experience, not from the ideal model of textbooks.

2. Government as structured service, not as improvised charisma

The second criteria is equally clear. We are not in front of a pontificate who bets on naive pastoralism. Lion XIV does not name sympathetic but weak figures in government.

Administrative capacity appears as an indispensable condition, albeit never in a technocratic key. At Westminster, legal training and experience in church court speaks for itself. In New York and Vienna, attention to the management of complex structures, subjected to media and political pressure, is equally evident.

The message is straightforward: The Church needs pastors who are able to decide, organize, delegate, and assume conflicts, without hiding behind spiritual language that avoids accountability.

3. Bishops who know how to read their time.

Perhaps the most characteristic feature of the pontificate of Leo XIV is this: the election of bishops with contextual intelligence. It's not about adapting critically to the world, but understanding it to evangelize it.

New York and Westminster require leaders capable of moving in plural societies, highly media sensitive to language, rights and public scrutiny. Vienna, on the other hand, claims a pastor capable of guarding a solid tradition in the context of advanced secularization and some ecclesiastical fatigue.

Here emerges a fundamental principle: there is no standard bishop, but pastors suitable for specific contexts, with a fine reading of culture, politics and public opinion.

4. Doctrine lived not ideologized

Draw attention to what doesn't take center stage. These bishops are not identified by doctrinal battles, ideological alignments, or theological protagonism.

This does not imply relativism It indicates, rather, a commitment to an embodied doctrine, sustained in communion and pastoral practice, rather than proclaimed as an identity flag.

Lion XIV seems to suggest, without explicitly saying, that Orthodoxy translates into good governance, pastoral closeness and historical discernment ends up barren.

5. Lion XIV, the interpretive key

All this is better understood if you look at Robert Francis Prevost himself, today Leo XIV. We are not in front of a Pope who theorizes the Episcopacy from the outside. We're in front of someone who's already experienced this model first-hand.

Prevost was forged in the mission in Peru, in the government of a peripheral diocese like Chiclayo and in the leadership of an international religious congregation. He knew the Church from the bottom and from the inside, before he knew it from Rome.

That's why he appoints bishops with real pastoral history. Do not choose what you admire in abstract; choose what you recognize as effective because you have lived it.

His sober, underperforming, discernment-focused style of government is clearly reflected in the profiles he chooses. At the ecclesiastical princes. Not noisy figures. Solid pastors.

In synthesis:

Compared to the profile of Leo XIV, these appointments reveal something essential: the Pope is institutionalizing his own experience.

It does not govern from nostalgia of the past nor from anxiety about the future, but from a mature conviction: the Church is held today with bishops capable of inhabiting complexity without losing the center.

In that sense, Hicks, Moth and GrĂĽnwidl aren't just good choices. They are, in the background, the pastoral autobiography of Leon XIV written in Episcopal key.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

4 PM SUNDAY VIGIL MASS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7, FOR THE 5TH SUNDAY OF TIME OF THE YEAR

 I celebrated St. Gregory the Great Church’s 5th Sunday of the Time of the Year at their Vigil. The church was packed, seating about 700 souls. But they also need an overflow space in their social hall where the Mass is live-streamed to the hall. A deacon there distributes Holy Communion at the same time as Communion is distributed in the church—the social hall is a glorified “Communion Service” and I am not sure how kosher it is, but alas.









You can view the Facebook video of Sunday Mass HERE. The Mass begins around Minute 18:30.

MY STUNNING HOMILY AFTER THE GOSPEL!

MY FORMER BISHOP OF SAVANNAH, NOW THE CURRENT ARCHBISHOP OF ATLANTA “RITE OF INSTALLATION AS THE ARCHBISHOP OF ATLANTA” AT THE CATHEDRAL OF CHRIST THE KING

 Poor Archbishop Hartmayer! He was named the Archbishop of Atlanta during the Covid Pandemic and the shut-down! Thus he had no real farewell from Savannah due to Covid restrictions.

And His Excellency's Installation Mass at the Cathedral of Christ the King in Atlanta was under Covid restrictions too—thus almost no laity were present and not all the priests and bishops who would have been there otherwise.

But, please note how sober Archbishop Hartmayer's Installation was in comparison to Archbishop Hicks of New York.

The Atlanta Cathedral is a splendid example of Gothic Revival architecture. Unfortunately it is quite small for an Archdiocese as large as Atlanta. But it is in the correct spot in the Buckhead area of Atlanta. Across the street is a quite splendid gothic Episcopalian Cathedral. It is much larger. Maybe there should be a swap?

The Installation Rite begins at about minute 2:05:

THE GREAT LEGACY OF ST. POPE JOHN PAUL II WAS HIS DESIRE IN 1978 TO RESTORE THE GREAT DISCIPLINE OF THE CHURCH THAT HAD BEEN SQUANDERED IN THE PREVIOUS 10 TO 12 YEARS, 1966 TO 1978


What we have seen with Pope Francis’ papacy is a return to the period of 1966 - 1978 and the liturgical, moral and doctrinal laxity of that period. All this laxity affected the clergy first, as almost immediately following 1966 an unprecedented numbers of priests formed in the discipline of the Pre-Vatican II Church were leaving their life-long commitment to celibacy and getting married, usually to sisters/nuns in solemn vows. There was complete confusion in religious life and a flip/flop of an unimaginable proportion that stripped most women’s religious orders of the reasons why they exist. Today, the legacy women’s orders that staffed schools, hospitals and social services are gone or almost gone. They are on life-support. 

The John Jay Report indicated that these pre-Vatican II disciplined priests/bishops, once liberated from that discipline were the ones who sexually abused minors and vulnerable adults with the peak in the number of these liberated priests abusing people to be 1974, just 10 years after the smoke of Satan entered the cracks in the foundation of the Church and her great discipline. 

There was liturgical chaos led by bishops, priests and religious. In dismantling the pre-Vatican II Liturgies and experimenting in wild ways with the Bugnini Mass, they also went after popular devotions, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Rosary and all kinds of culturally based popular devotions, like the cult of the saints, novenas, Stations of the Cross and the most pernicious and diabolical, the Blessed Sacrament reserved in churches in a central place, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, Eucharistic Processions and perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in local parishes.

Two liturgical recent events with bishops appointed by Pope Leo and I don’t blame the pope for anyone he appoints, is how their Mass of Ordination (Vienna’s) and the Installation Mass of the new Archbishop of New York were celebrated. 

Even Episcopal liturgies are in crisis with continued creativity, novel liberties and folksiness and yes an entertaining spirit. The Installation Rite of Archbishop Hicks was laughable. If someone was Rip Van Winkle, falling to sleep in 1965 and waking up in time to go to Archbishops Hick’s Installation Mass, they would wonder where in the hell they were and if in fact they were sent to hell. They would not recognize that Liturgy as Catholic and not even as Protestant. It was neither fish nor fowl. That Installation Rite in no way was in continuity with the pre-Vatican II Rite or the Actual Revised Rite that is mandated to be used in 2026! It was an entertainment mess, a spectacle in the true sense, not the spectacle that Cardinal Cupich describes as the Pre-Vatican II Mass. 

The liturgy, though,  is but one symptom of what has happened to the Church in the past 13 years with the recovery of the 1966-1978 Church. Unity can never come from the pathology of that period.

Thus Pope Leo would do well to recover what St. Pope John Paul II initiated during his long papacy and what Pope Benedict XVI, a doctor of the Church, continued:

This is from AI:

Pope John Paul II's papacy (1978–2005) was marked by a deliberate effort to reestablish an apostolic and pastoral Church rooted in tradition, orthodoxy, discipline, and hierarchy following the tumultuous post-Vatican II period
. His goal was to stabilize the Church by encouraging a "re-disciplined" institution capable of digesting the reforms of the previous two decades, rather than continuing to change them.
Key aspects of his desire to restore the "great discipline" of the Church included:
  • 1983 Code of Canon Law: He promulgated the new Code of Canon Law, explicitly stating that the Church's task is to adapt its canonical discipline to the mission of the Church while maintaining fidelity to its divine founder.
  • Liturgical Sanity: Addressing the "wreckovations" and liturgical abuses that followed Vatican II, John Paul II undertook initiatives to restore beauty, reverence, and respect for the past in the liturgy. He emphasized strict adherence to norms, the proper use of Latin, and promoted traditional liturgical music.
  • Restoring Authority and Doctrine: He worked to rein in theological dissent by reinforcing Catholic identity in education, notably through Ex corde Ecclesiae (1990) and Veritatis Splendor (1993), which aimed to ensure doctrinal orthodoxy.
  • Hierarchical Discipline: He appointed bishops dedicated to orthodox, traditional teaching and, along with Cardinal Ratzinger, acted against proponents of "liberation theology" and dissident theologians.
  • Reviving Tradition: He reintroduced traditional practices, such as the public Corpus Christi procession in Rome, which had previously faded.
  • Theological Foundation: He balanced the "spirit of Vatican II" with a deep, traditional Thomistic philosophy and respect for the Church's historical continuity.
While aiming for this restoration, John Paul II was noted for using a "gradualist" approach—teaching, correcting, and encouraging rather than solely relying on heavy disciplinary sanctions.


MORE AND MORE REVERSALS OF FRANCIS BY LEO—WILL THE IMPORTANT ONE HAPPEN? MY CLAIRVOYANCE IS MOVING ME IN THAT DIRECTION, MORE OF A BACK-UP TO GET ON THE RIGHT FORK IN THE ROAD TO GO FORWARD…


While this doesn’t affect the person in the pew, it does say that Pope Leo has no problem in reversing some of the more divisive and problematic policies that Pope Francis instituted. 

This is a Pillar headline:

Leo rent reversal returns Vatican to ‘previous situation’


Pope Leo XIV reversed this week a Pope Francis-era policy which had proven deeply unpopular within the Roman Curia, which ended free or subsidized housing for senior Vatican officials and cardinals.

Will we see this?

Leo Mass reversal returns Vatican to ‘previous situation’


Pope Leo XIV reversed this week a Pope Francis-era policy which had proven deeply unpopular within the Roman Church, which ended Summorum Pontificum for young and senior Catholics, laity and clergy.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

POPE LEO APPOINTS A NEW ARCHBISHOP FOR DENVER

 



Resignations and Appointments, 07.02.2026

Resignation and appointment of metropolitan archbishop of Denver, U.S.A.

The Holy Father has accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the metropolitan archdiocese of Denver, United States of America, presented by Archbishop Samuel Joseph Aquila.

The Holy Father has appointed Bishop James R. Golka as metropolitan archbishop of Denver, United States of America, transferring him from the diocese of Colorado Springs, United States of America.

Curriculum vitae

Archbishop-elect James Robert Golka was born on 22 September 1966 in Grand Island, Nebraska. He attended Creighton University in Omaha, obtaining a bachelor’s degree in philosophy. He subsequently carried out his ecclesiastical studies at Saint Paul Seminary in Saint Paul, Minnesota, where he was awarded a Master of Divinity.

He was ordained a priest on 3 June 1994 for the diocese of Grand Island.

He has held the following offices: parish vicar of Saint James in Kearney (1994-2000) and Holy Rosary in Alliance (2000-2001), parish priest of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Scottsbluff (2001-2006) and Saint Patrick in North Platte (2006-2016), vicar general (2018-2021) and rector of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Cathedral (2016-2021).

He was appointed bishop of Colorado Springs on 30 April 2021, receiving episcopal consecration on the following 29 June.

I JUST DON’T GET IT AND I LIKE THE MODERN RITES OF THE MASS WHEN THERE IS AWE, WONDER, DIGNITY AND DEVOTION—BUT YOU CAN’T COUNT ON ANY OF THAT IN THE MODERN MASS


I watched most of the Installation Mass for the new Archbishop of New York, The Most Rev. Ronald Hicks.

Since he is already a bishop, there was an “installation rite” after the Greeting and prior to the Gloria.

That rite, and I don’t think it is by design but by manipulation, turned what should be a solemn, reverent rite into an unruly pep rally. Nothing about it was sober and dignified, which should characterize the Roman Rite, especially the reformed rite that is supposed to have noble simplicity and dignity. 

I lost track at how many times Cardinal Dolan and Archbishop Hicks received loud applause and a standing ovations. But included in the applause was hooting and hollering, usually associated with a pep rally or some other kind of jamboree. It does not belong a solemn liturgical rite. 

The Papal Nuncio even had the congregation sing Happy Birthday to Cardinal Dolan and again more applause, hooting and hollering! UGH!

Then the Papal Bull from Pope Leo was read and the parchment handed to the new Archbishop and he paraded around with it and throughout the Cathedral as though it was the Heisman Trophy! And again more sustained applause. What the H?

More depressing is that the people loved it, ate it up and wanted more! It was not a liturgy of the Church, it was like going to the pre-game activities of a Super Bowl! UGH! And they loved it! Depressing!

After this triumphalism, the Mass continued with the Gloria and everything else, with the kind of reverence we have come to experience in the Modern Mass. 

How can this kind of thing be stopped? Read the red and do the black and stick to the liturgical rite as written.

Before hand, tell the congregation there is to be no applause. And add nothing to the Rite that would cause people to start acting like they are at a pep rally or a Super Bowl pre-game warm up or half time entertainment! 

Pope Francis at all large papal Masses at the Vatican had someone ahead of time ask that there be no applause for the pope when he entered and departed. Pope Leo has continued this tradition and there is now sobriety at papal Masses by simply asking people to act reverently not drunkenly. 

Is that too much to ask?

Press the link for the Papal Nuncio leading the singing of Happy Birthday to Cardinal Dolan. I think they should have gotten a Marilyn Monroe impersonator to lead that like the real one did for President Kennedy (RIP):

THE VIDEO HERE, CRINGE WORTHY!

Pope Benedict XVI on applause during the Liturgy:

Applause improperly shifts the focus from God to human achievement, arguing that the Mass is a time for silent, reverent worship, not a performance.
Key points regarding Pope Benedict XVI's views on applause during Mass:
  • Replacement of Liturgy: Benedict stated that when applause breaks out for human accomplishments, the focus of the liturgy has completely disappeared.
  • "Religious Entertainment": He criticized the trend of treating the Mass as a form of "religious entertainment" or "titillation" rather than worship.
  • Proper Focus: The purpose of the Mass is to adore God, not to applaud human efforts, such as choir performances or homilies.
  • Context: While applause is a gesture of joy and a normal part of life, it is considered inappropriate in the context of the Holy Mass, which is a solemn, transcendent event.
  • Silence over Clapping: Benedict's perspective aligns with a broader push for reverence, suggesting that hands should be folded in prayer rather than clapping.
While some may argue for applause as a way to express joy, the theological stance of Pope Benedict emphasized that the liturgy's true joy is found in profound, silent union with God

Friday, February 6, 2026

EWTN’S NEWS STORY CONCERNING THE FIRST POPE TO EVER MEET WITH COURAGE INTERNATIONAL—POPE LEO XIV….

 


Historic occasion’: Pope Leo XIV meets with same-sex attraction ministry Courage International

“We talked about the importance of chastity, how it heals and strengthens and restores the person," said Courage International Executive Director Father Brian Gannon.

Daniel Payne
February 6, 2026 at 12:25 PM ET

Pope Leo XIV met with members of Courage International on Feb. 6 in what the ministry called a “historic” and “momentous” event that took place in Vatican City. 

The Connecticut-based ministry, which for nearly half a century has ministered to Catholics dealing with same-sex attraction, said in a press statement that leaders associated with the group, including Bridgeport Bishop Frank Caggiano and group Executive Director Father Brian Gannon, met with the Holy Father in a private audience. 

“The opportunity to share with the Holy Father the works of the apostolate, to provide pastoral accompaniment to persons who experience same-sex attraction but who strive to live chaste lives or to accompany family members who have a loved one who identifies as LGBTQ, was a momentous occasion,” the group said. 

Officially founded in 1980, Courage International marked 45 years in 2025 of helping individuals struggling with sexuality to “live a chaste life” in line with Church teaching. Originally founded in Manhattan, the group’s headquarters is based in Bridgeport.

Pope Leo “is very, very supportive of everything that Courage is doing.”

Pope Leo “is very, very supportive of everything that Courage is doing.”

Father Brian GannonExecutive Director, Courage International

Gannon, who came into the leadership role at the organization in 2024, told EWTN News on Feb. 6 that the meeting — the group's first with a pope — was an “extraordinary gift” from the Holy Father.

“The pope was very gracious, a very good listener,” he said. “We talked about the importance of chastity, how it heals and strengthens and restores the person. The pope was obviously very encouraging.”

The Holy Father in turn “talked about freedom, about what real freedom is —not the unbridled freedom that the world offers, but rather mastering our passions and being in complete surrender to the will of God.”

Gannon said the meeting with Leo constitutes a “huge morale booster” for the group, which has chapters in over a dozen countries and numbers more than 200 chaplains, including through its family support ministry, EnCourage. 

“All the members of Courage throughout the whole world will see that the pope extended an audience and listened and is very, very supportive of everything that Courage is doing,” Gannon said, calling the encounter “a huge blessing.”

The priest told EWTN News last year that the organization is a “needed ministry” that “helps people find peace.” 

Group members “come together, read through the goals, discuss their experiences and challenges during the week, and pray,” he said. “Prayer is absolutely central to it.”

On Feb. 6, Gannon said, the pope spoke to the group about “the woundedness of people,” and how “Jesus Christ is always with you and you’re never alone.” 

Gannon described the group’s mission as helping people to develop self-control in service to Christ. He offered the example of someone who falls into water and is ”thrashing about,” unable to swim. 

“The person who learns how to swim is really free, not the person who’s thrashing about,” he said. “You put the passions to good use for the pursuit of God.”