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Wednesday, February 11, 2026

WOW! A STUNNING RENOVATION OF A CARMELITE MONASTERY CHAPEL AND THE RENOVATION EMPHASIZES POPE LEO’S ORDINARY MAGISTERIAL TEACHING CONCERNING THE PRIESTHOOD AS “ALTER CHRISTUS”!


Liturgical Arts Journal
has the story about the Carmel Chapel of the Holy Spirit in Littleton, Colorado. You can see their full story HERE.

If you look at how the Bugnini altar is placed on the steps leading up to the “true” altar, it is done as it was in my childhood parish right after Vatican II. That brought back some memories of 1966 at St. Joseph Church in Augusta, Georgia.

The Bugnini altar is gone and Mass is celebrated ad orientem. This posture emphasizes and makes clearer that the priest celebrating Mass is the “alter Christus” and “In Persona Christi Capitis” as Pope Leo describes the role of the priest at Mass in an elocution to Madrid’s priests. The heterodox are howling out loud and beating their breasts over Leo’s Ordinary Magisterial teaching, truly good news!

What Pope Leo taught about the priesthood has implications for how even the Bugnini Mass should be celebrated and we find those implications in the ad orientem new altar of the Carmelite chapel. 

Here are the stunning before and afters. Thank God they removed the “second graders’” stained glass windows too!

BEFORE:


AFTER (NO DIRECT SHOT OF THE NEW WINDOWS BUT YOU CAN TELL THEY ARE NOT ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CHILDREN’S):




GOOD NEWS, THE HETERODOX LEFT ARE FREAKING OUT OVER POPE LEO’S ORDINARY MAGISTERIAL TEACHING ON THE PRIESTHOOD—GOOD NEWS INDEED!



The post below this one from Silieri non possum describes the same situation but in a different context.

Rorate Caeli includes what that astounding theologian Andrea Grillo, who criticized a young saint for his traditional and orthodox Eucharistic theology, thinks about Pope Leo’s Ordinary Magisterial teaching concerning the priesthood.

Thank God that we are once again seeing the true nature of the heterodox left as they acted toward Pope Benedict XVI, but found favor with Pope Francis and did not act that way toward His Holiness, but now they are acting like they did to Pope Benedict toward Pope Leo XIV. This unmasking of the heterodox left is good news indeed and must be of the Holy Spirit. 

Here is Rorate Caeli’s quote:

There is no doubt that many of Pope Leo's speeches were frequently inspired by Augustine's thinking. From the outset, the motto so typical of Augustine's understanding of the minister's task appeared in all its authority: “With you Christian, for you bishop.”
It is no coincidence that Augustine comes from the African Church in which Tertullian and Cyprian largely identified the Christian as an “alter Christus,” even if the expression does not seem to occur literally in their works. However, the “title of salvation” is not ordination, but baptism. It is baptism that makes every man (and every woman) an “alter Christus.”
Only much later, in modern or even contemporary times, did we see the emergence of a limited and partial use of the expression “alter Christus,” whose earliest source seems to be a definition referring to St. Francis of Assisi. The association not with a friar, but with a priest, spread in the 1800s, became a “commonplace” in the 1900s (in Pius X, Pius XI, Benedict XV, and Pius XII), and then reappeared at the end of the 1900s, with John Paul II and Benedict XVI, in the priestly year 2009-2010. But the expression has no ancient tradition; it appears to be a late-modern invention, in which terminology for Christians and saints is applied exclusively to “priests.”
This is the context in which Pope Leo sent his letter to the priests of Madrid. It is surprising that the content is split in two and that reasonable premises lead to conclusions that have no connection with those premises. I would like to highlight the tension that runs through the text. ...
...
That the core of the priesthood is “being alter Christus” is a rather bold hypothesis, without a long tradition, with a strong apologetic component, typical of a theological style of the early 1900s, superseded by the Second Vatican Council and the new vision of ministry, which finds its foundations in ancient theology. When Augustine heard that the bishop was being called “spouse,” he was opposed. If anything, he said, he is the friend of the Bridegroom. That the “priest” is “alter Christus” is the result of a sacred theory of ministry, which Augustine would have rejected. The pastor is not primarily sacralized in a difference from the Christian, but is unified in his Body. 
This unilateral discourse in the Letter is followed by a description of the “priest” along the lines of the “cathedral”: it is a strange text, which appears forced and reductive both for the figure of the priest and for the function of the cathedral. A “self-referential” interpretation of the cathedral is a way of not doing justice to either the cathedral or the ordained minister (who is ordained not to himself but to the people of God). However, the fact that the cathedral is a place “open to all” is interpreted as referring only to ‘priests’: here too, the meaning of the cathedral church is seriously misunderstood, as it is not “for priests” or for the bishop, but for Christians.

...

A church in which “alter Christus” refers not to the baptized or the saints, but to ordained ministers, is a church conceived as “societas inaequalis” and “societas perfecta,” according to the temptation of Catholicism between 1870 and 1950. Even for Madrid priests, it would not be a great achievement to return to the tones and styles of those times. [Source, in Italian]

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

CLARITY HAS RETURNED TO PAPAL TEACHINGS: THIS TIME IN A COHERENT AND TRADITIONAL WAY, POPE LEO MAKES CLEAR THE ROLE OF THE PRIEST AND THOSE WHO WANT TO DECONSTRUCT THE SACRAMENTALITY OF HOLY ORDERS WILL BE ALARMED!



FROM SILERI NON POSSUM:

Vatican City - The letter that Pope Leo XIV addressed to the presbytery of the Archdiocese of Madrid on the occasion of the "Convivium" Presbyteral Assembly (February 9, 2026), released only yesterday, brings the essential issues of priestly life back to the forefront with sober authority. The Pope adopts a tone that is at once spiritual, almost poetic, yet surprisingly concrete: clear words, capable of breathing high without losing touch with reality, and of touching—without concessions—on what many priests today feel is most urgent and most true.

The clergy, and not only those of Madrid, have welcomed it with enthusiasm: in these hours the letter is being circulated on WhatsApp, forwarded, commented on, even printed. This morning it was also a topic of discussion during a clergy retreat. Precisely for this reason, what happened this morning on X (formerly Twitter) is disconcerting: Archbishop Giovanni Checchinato, Metropolitan of Cosenza-Bisignano, retweeted a post by an unknown, non-Catholic author who frontally attacked the Pope for his use of the expression “alter Christus,” derided as a residue to be erased: “I hoped never to hear the expression ‘being alter Christus’ again in my life, and instead the Pope even defines it as the ‘most authentic nucleus of the priesthood’.” What a non-Catholic who, with singular presumption, claims to judge and criticize the choices of Peter’s Successor might hope for is of no interest to us. What is striking, however, is that a Catholic Archbishop, who in recent years has never dared to question the Pope, should now choose to relaunch an attack as insignificant as it is frontal against the Pontiff: a gesture alien to Catholic sentiment and, for this very reason, also dangerous.

The crux of the matter:

This isn't a simple lexical detail, as some would have us believe with barbs designed more to discredit than to argue: it's the usual style of keyboard warriors, who strike sideways precisely because they have nothing to prove in terms of reasoning. Here, a precise theological core is being challenged and, at the same time, an attempt is being made to delegitimize a magisterial line that some would now like to make impracticable. An episcopate selected in past years according to ideological criteria is beginning to emerge, one that today takes the measure of Leo XIV with the same posture with which, in other times, a section of the clergy and episcopate chose to wear down Benedict XVI. In this context, the retweet is not a neutral gesture: it becomes the sounding board for an attack that not only targets the Pope, but also wounds the priesthood.

The Pope's Letter

In the letter, the Pope describes a time of secularization, of words that "no longer mean the same thing," and calls for "educating the gaze" in discernment. He then explains: Madrid, and the Church, need "men configured to Christ," capable of sustaining the ministry through "a living relationship with Him, nourished by the Eucharist and expressed in a pastoral charity marked by sincere self-giving." Within this framework lies the phrase that got Checchinato on edge: "It is not a question of inventing new models or redefining the identity we have received, but of re-proposing... the priesthood in its most authentic core—being an alter Christus." Leo XIV is not launching a slogan: he is summarizing what the Church means when it speaks of the ordained priest.

“Alter Christus” is not an invention of Leo XIV

The expression “alter Christus” has been part of Catholic language for decades to express a precise point: in the ordained ministry, Christ truly makes his action operative in the Church through a sacramentally marked man. One need only look at the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Speaking of the ordained ministry, it explains that “it is Christ himself who is present to his Church” and that the priest “acts ‘in persona Christi Capitis’” (CCC, 1548). This is not a poetic way of saying “imitating Jesus.” Here, it is stated that, in the sacrament of Holy Orders, the priest receives a real configuration that enables him to represent Christ the Head and Shepherd in ecclesial action. The Second Vatican Ecumenical Council uses the same conceptual framework: priests, “by virtue of the anointing of the Holy Spirit, are marked by a special character that configures them to Christ the priest” so that they can “act in the name of Christ, the Head of the Church.” (Presbyterorum ordinis, 2). And, even before that, Pope Pius XI dedicated an entire section of the encyclical Ad Catholici Sacerdotii to the "sublime dignity" of the priest, summarizing it unambiguously: "the priest... is truly another Christ." (Pius XI, Ad Catholici Sacerdotii).

Contesting that formula means ignoring that it is already written in recent and contemporary magisterium, from the Catechism to the Second Vatican Council, up to the pontifical texts of the twentieth century. It means ignoring what the priesthood is, even if some like to call themselves "happy priests" within a certain perspective—often only apparent—of humility, which then emerges very little when it comes to actually interacting with their own diocesan priests.

"In persona Christi Capitis": What the Church Really Says

The social media attack stems from a caricature: "alter Christus" as exalting the priest above the faithful. This interpretation clashes with the texts themselves. Vatican II states that "the common priesthood of the faithful and the ministerial priesthood... differ essentially and not only in degree," and immediately adds that they are "ordered to each other." (Lumen Gentium, 10). The ordained ministry has a real difference, but that difference has a purpose: it is for the edification of the People of God, not for the creation of castes. The Catechism is even more explicit in preventing distortions: the presence of Christ in the minister "must not be understood as if he were protected against every human weakness... error, even sin." (CCC, 1550). The Church, therefore, cuts at the root two illusions: the clericalism that feels untouchable and the anti-clericalism that claims to demolish the sacrament because some ministers are unworthy. The guarantee concerns the sacramental action, not the automatic sanctity of the minister. As usual, moreover, these keyboard haters so dear to a certain type of bishop with party membership cards, do not even know how to read the context, the entire speech. In fact, this is the point that Leo XIV dismantles when he offers this meaningful image: before the altar, "the People of God is born in the baptismal font; in the confessional it is continually regenerated"; in the sacraments "grace manifests itself as the most real and effective force of the priestly ministry." Then he uses a phrase that demolishes any self-divinization of the priest: "you are not the source, but the channel." Alter Christus, precisely from this perspective, means being made instruments of an action that comes from Christ and leads to Christ.

"Configured to Christ" means sacraments, prayer, fraternity, service

"Configured to Christ" is not a spiritualist label, but a concrete grammar of priestly life: sacraments, prayer, fraternity, service. If the Pope, in his letter to Madrid, returns to the term "alter Christus," he is not raising the priest's "sacred" tone: he is recalling the essential Catholic fact, namely, that the priest, in the Church and for the Church, is "a sacramental re-presentation of Jesus Christ, Head and Shepherd," and for this reason "repeats His gestures of forgiveness and the offering of salvation, especially through Baptism, Penance, and the Eucharist," "in the name and person of Christ, Head and Shepherd," as Pastores Dabo Vobis reminds us. Here lies the heart: the "alter Christus" lives on the real ground of Christ's action in the sacraments, not on that of self-referentiality. "This pastoral charity... springs above all from the Eucharistic sacrifice," which is "the center and root of the entire life of the priest," to the point of characterizing priestly existence "in a 'sacrificial' sense": it is the opposite of the clerical pose, because it refers to the altar and the gift of self. 

And precisely here prayer as identity enters: Benedict XVI said this by linking the "alter Christus" to a life "ontologically configured to Christ" and therefore "essentially relational," "in Christ, for Christ, and with Christ"; not to dominate, but "in the service of men," developing this conformation "in prayer, in 'being heart to heart' with Him" ​​(General Audience, June 24, 2009). Fraternity also follows: pastoral charity "requires" that priests work "in the bond of communion with the Bishops and other brothers in the priesthood," because the "alter Christus" is not a spiritual monad but a man inserted into a body, responsible for concrete bonds. Finally, service: Pastores dabo vobis itself recalls that the authority of Christ the "Head" coincides with his being a servant, with "the total gift of self"; and Benedict XVI, along the same lines, clarified that the priest is not "master," but "servant," the "voice" of the Word, to the point of "losing himself" in Christ that makes the proclamation credible. This is what is challenged today when "alter Christus" is ridiculed: not a word, but the Catholic content it enshrines, namely, Christ at the center, the sacraments as the axis of ministry, prayer as breath, communion as ecclesial discipline, service as a form of authority. One wonders how Archbishop Gianni plans to train his priests, and one is left scratching one's head.

d.F.R.

Silere non possum

LIFESITE NEWS PRAISES ARCHBISHOP DESIGNATE GOLKA FOR HIS ORTHODOXY AND CATHOLIC POLITICIANS WHO VOTE FOR ABORTION NOT TO RECEIVE HOLY COMMUNION UNTIL THEY REPENT AND GO TO CONFESSION!

 


PRESS TITLE FOR FULL ARTICLE:

Pope Leo names bishop outspoken against abortion laws as sixth archbishop of Denver

MONETY BYTE:

2024, Bishop Golka also released a pastoral letter for the Jubilee year titled “Christ Our Hope” in which he encouraged pastors “to make the Sacrament of Reconciliation available to the faithful as much as possible” and emphasized the need for ongoing personal conversion as a means of effective lay evangelization.

He also spoke to the importance of strengthening Catholic identity in Catholic schools, recalling the mission of these institutions as having their “origin in the person of Christ and its roots in the teachings of the Gospel.”

I’M LEFT SCRATCHING MY HEAD! POPE LEO HAS A PRIVATE AUDIENCE WITH COURAGE INTERNATIONAL WHICH MINISTERS TO THE SO-CALLED “LGBTQ+++” COMMUNITY AND THERE ARE CRICKETS SOUNDS FROM JESUITICAL FATHER JAMES MARTIN, SJ AND THE NATIONAL cATHOLIC REPORTER—CAN ANYONE TELL ME WHY? I AM SCRATCHING MY HEAD ON THIS ONE!


As far as I can tell, there has been no praise of Pope Leo XIV for his inclusivity of meeting with members of Courage International, from Jesuitical Father James Martin, SJ and the National catholic Reporter.

You would think that Jesuitical Father James Martin, SJ would plaster all over his media platforms this LGBTQ+++ ministry’s meeting with the Holy Roman Pontiff, the Vicar of Christ. 

The same with the National catholic Reporter, you would think there would be glowing commentaries about the Pope meeting with this LGBTQ+++ ministry leaders, including a bishop.

But so far CRICKETS!


AI SUMARY OF POPE LEO’S INCLUSIVITY IN MEETING WITH LGBTQ MINISTRIES:

On February 6, 2026, 
Pope Leo XIV held a private audience with Courage International, a ministry supporting Catholics with same-sex attraction, where he offered strong support for their work, emphasized the healing power of chastity, and affirmed that Christ walks with the wounded. He spoke of true freedom as mastering passions and surrendering to God's will, calling the group's mission a "needed ministry".
Key details regarding the meeting include:
  • Support for the Mission: Pope Leo XIV told the group he is "very, very supportive" of their efforts to help people live chaste lives.
  • "Never Alone": He emphasized that no one is alone and that Christ is particularly close to those who are suffering.
  • Focus on Chastity and Freedom: The Pope highlighted the importance of chastity for personal healing and defined true freedom not as "thrashing about" in passions, but as "graced self-mastery" in service to Christ.
  • Historic Meeting: This was described as a historic first papal audience for the organization, which was established in 1980.
Father Brian Gannon, Executive Director of Courage International, described the encounter as a "huge blessing" and a "significant morale booster".

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”:


🔴 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, Grünwidl 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 Grünwidl aren't just good choices. They are, in the background, the pastoral autobiography of Leon XIV written in Episcopal key.