Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

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Pope John XXIII delivering an allocution in St. Peter's Basilica on June 20, 1962, surrounded by cardinals and bishops in traditional liturgical attire.

Allocutio Ioannis XXIII (1962.06.20)

The text is a Latin allocution delivered by John XXIII on June 20, 1962, at the close of the seventh session of the Central Preparatory Commission for Vatican II. He exults over three years of conciliar preparation, praises the work of commissions (theological, disciplinary, ecumenical, laical, technical), links the council to a “mystical tower” of peace, invokes global collaboration of hierarchy and laity, calls for universal prayer, and symbolically ties his own name “John” to John the Baptist and John the Evangelist as a programmatic key to the coming council. The allocution crowns the entire preparatory phase, presenting Vatican II as a providential, Spirit-led, and peace-bringing event for the whole human family — and thus reveals with crystalline clarity the anthropocentric, naturalistic, and ecclesiologically subversive program of the conciliar revolution.

A young seminarian kneeling in prayer in a traditional Catholic chapel, surrounded by religious texts and vestments, evoking pre-conciliar piety and devotion.

Allocutio IOANNIS XXIII (1962.05.26)

In this allocution of 26 May 1962, John XXIII addresses participants of an international meeting on vocations to the priesthood, praising their efforts, insisting on prayer for holy and industrious clergy, and exhorting to form seminarians through good family, parish, and ecclesiastical examples. He commends discipline, piety, chastity, and pastoral dedication, proposing his own childhood attraction to the priesthood as an edifying anecdote, and concludes with encouragement and a “Vicarius Christi” tone, blessing the work of fostering priestly vocations.

John XXIII delivering the Allocutio of 12 May 1962 in the Vatican's Apostolic Palace, with the Central Preparatory Commission seated in reverent attention. The scene is bathed in soft, natural light filtering through stained glass windows depicting traditional Catholic iconography.

Allocutio IOANNIS XXIII (1962.05.12)

In this address of 12 May 1962, John XXIII congratulates the members of the Central Preparatory Commission shortly before the opening of Vatican II, praises their labours and expresses serene confidence that the coming council – often styled by him a “new Pentecost” – will bring abundant fruits for the Church and even “for the whole human race,” while warning moderately against excessive trust in earthly institutions and stressing the need for orderly preparation, public information, and pastoral openness. This apparently pious and tranquil text is in fact a programmatic manifesto of the coming conciliar revolution, cloaking a radical reorientation of the Church’s mission under biblical phrases and sentimental optimism.

Pope John XXIII addressing bishops during his 1962 allocution at the Vatican, highlighting the doctrinal concerns and the contrast between traditional Catholicism and conciliar optimism.

Allocutio Ioannis XXIII (1962.04.03)

John XXIII’s allocution of 3 April 1962, delivered at the close of the fifth session of the Central Preparatory Commission for Vatican II, offers a self-congratulatory panorama of the preparatory work, exalts harmonious debate among bishops, praises contemporary interest in the liturgy, endorses the modern means of social communication and “progress” of arts and sciences, laments difficulties facing missions, and concludes with sentimental symbolism (the “golden rose”) as an omen of joy and hope for the coming council. In reality, this speech is a programmatic manifesto of horizontal optimism, naturalistic trust in modern culture, and deliberate muting of the integral Catholic combat against error—an omen not of renewal, but of doctrinal disarmament and ecclesial self-dissolution.

Varia

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