Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

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John XXIII addressing delegates of the Federation of Catholic Universities in 1959 in a grand hall adorned with religious icons and historical Catholic symbols.

Allocutio Ioannis XXIII moderatoribus Foederationis Universitatum Catholicarum (1959.04.01)

On 1 April 1959, John XXIII addresses leaders and delegates of the Federation of Catholic Universities, flattering them as an intellectual crown of the Church, praising their global network, invoking Pius XII’s brief recognizing the Federation, urging unity of Catholic academia, warning (in measured terms) against materialism and scientific pride, calling for the search for truth grounded in philosophy and theology, and finally soliciting their collaboration—intellectual and spiritual—for the recently announced “ecumenical council,” presented as a spectacle of unity and an invitation to separated brethren to return.

Antipope John XXIII delivering an allocution at the Pontifical Gregorian University in 1959, surrounded by clerics and academics in a traditional Catholic lecture hall.

A A A La Ioannes XXIII Allocutio (1959.01.18)

This Latin allocution of Antipope John XXIII at the Pontifical Gregorian University (18 January 1959) is a self-congratulatory eulogy of the institution as “Pontificia Universitas Gregoriana,” praising its global reach, its multiplication of disciplines, its governing role in forming clergy, and linking it to Gregory XIII, Trent, and the Jesuit educational ideal; it exalts academic expansion, institutional prestige, and the supposed continuity of Roman authority while omitting any real mention of the integral combat against heresy and Modernism that defined pre-1958 Catholicism. In reality, the text is an ideological overture: a carefully staged manifesto of a new, humanistic, academic religion that instrumentalizes the names of Trent and Gregory XIII to prepare the conciliar revolution and to neutralize the true doctrinal mission of the Church.

A somber depiction of John XXIII delivering his secret consistory allocution in 1958 within the Apostolic Palace, surrounded by new cardinals and faithful Catholics. The image captures the gravity and historical significance of the event.

Allocutio Ioannis XXIII (1958.12.15)

On 15 December 1958, John XXIII delivered a secret consistory allocution in the Apostolic Palace: he thanked civil rulers and the world for their congratulations on his election, praised the universal sympathy shown to the “pope” as a sign of the Church’s vitality, lamented persecution of Catholics in Communist China, called for fidelity to the Roman See, condemned illicit episcopal consecrations without “Apostolic mandate,” and announced the creation of 23 new “cardinals” to strengthen the Curia and global governance of the “Church.” In reality, this text is the early programmatic self-unveiling of the conciliar imposture: a sentimental, horizontal, and political manifesto which instrumentalizes genuine sufferings, empties the supernatural Primacy into diplomatic theatrics, and lays institutional foundations for the neo-church of Vatican II and its globalist, paramasonic agenda.

Portrait of Cardinals John XXIII and Cicognani in a traditional Vatican setting, reflecting the tensions of faith and bureaucracy during the Second Vatican Council.

A A A ES – LA IOANNES PP. XXIII (1963.02.24)

The document is a brief Latin congratulatory letter in which John XXIII, acting as “pope,” flatters and praises Cicognani—then a leading Curia figure and coordinator of public Church affairs and the Second Vatican Council—for his upcoming eightieth birthday. It extols his diligence, loyalty, and merits in diplomatic and curial service, invoking God’s blessings upon him.

Varia

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Antipope John XXIII
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