Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

Timeline of this heretical pontiff

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Basilica of the Holy Cross of the Valley of the Fallen with Benedictine monks praying in a dimly lit underground chapel.

Salutiferae Crucis (1960.04.07)

At first glance, the document known as Salutiferae Crucis (7 April 1960) is a Latin apostolic letter in which John XXIII declares the church of Holy Cross of the Valley of the Fallen (Santa Cruz del Valle de los Caídos) near Madrid to be a minor basilica. It praises the monumental cross dominating the Guadarrama mountains, extols the underground temple as a place of expiation and prayer for those fallen in the Spanish Civil War “on all sides,” and commends Francisco Franco’s role in erecting this shrine, emphasizing architectural splendour, Marian devotion, Benedictine presence, and perpetual suffrages offered for the nation. The letter concludes by granting all rights and privileges of a minor basilica to this sanctuary. Already in its premises and silences, this text exposes the new cult of a conciliar, political, sentimental Catholicism preparing to dethrone Christ the King and to replace the Church with a paramasonic civil religion of reconciliation without conversion, expiation without dogma, and liturgical splendour without doctrinal integrity.

A reverent Catholic image of Saint Joseph as the patron of the Diocese of Cúcuta, with a Latin document 'Beatus Ioseph' signed by John XXIII, set against a Gothic cathedral background.

Beatus Ioseph (1960.04.07)

Beatus Ioseph is a brief Latin act of John XXIII, in which he, as head of the conciliar structures, “confirms” Saint Joseph, Spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary, as principal heavenly Patron of the Diocese of Cúcuta, granting him the liturgical honors and privileges due to a primary diocesan patron and declaring all contrary acts null.

A reverent Catholic image of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Help of Christians in a chapel of the Diocese of Viedma, with Bishop Joseph Borgatti praying before her statue.

Auxiliatricem Virginem (1960.04.19)

The document under consideration is a Latin apostolic letter issued by John XXIII on 19 April 1960, in which he ostensibly confirms and proclaims the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title “Help of Christians” (Auxilium Christianorum) as the principal heavenly patroness of the Diocese of Viedma (Argentina), granting her all liturgical honours proper to a primary diocesan patron.

St. John Bosco guiding young Spanish apprentices in a traditional workshop setting, embodying Catholic values and resistance to modern dangers.

Peculiare studium (1960.04.22)

John XXIII’s apostolic letter “Peculiare studium” (22 April 1960) designates St John Bosco as heavenly patron of all Spanish “young apprentices” (industrial trainees), praising Bosco’s pedagogical zeal and exhorting that youth formation in Spain be shaped toward “true human dignity” and religious piety amid modern dangers. It cloaks this gesture in solemn juridical language, decreeing liturgical patronage and privileges, while remaining entirely within the horizon of social-pastoral concern for workers and apprentices.

Varia

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Antipopes separate web sites with their all documents refutation – in progress

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Antipope John XXIII
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