Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

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A Catholic priest in traditional vestments with indigenous people on the shore of the Solomon Islands, symbolizing missionary work.

Insularum Salomonicarum (1959.06.11)

The constitution “Insularum Salomonicarum” of 11 June 1959, issued under the name of John XXIII, reorganizes ecclesiastical jurisdictions in the Solomon Islands by detaching specified islands from the Northern and Southern Solomon Islands Apostolic Vicariates to erect a new Apostolic Vicariate of the Western Solomon Islands, entrusted to the Dominicans under the usual dependence on the so‑called Apostolic See. The text clothes a bureaucratic territorial act in pious language about the limitless expansion of Christ’s kingdom, but in reality it showcases the juridical self-assertion of the nascent conciliar regime, instrumentalizing missionary structures as a prelude to the ecclesiological revolution soon to be unleashed.

A traditional Catholic bishop in liturgical vestments stands solemnly before a historic cathedral in Simla, India, holding a scroll representing the 1959 ecclesial decree.

DELHIENSIS ET SIMLENSIS (1959.06.04)

In this Latin act, Angelo Roncalli as “Ioannes XXIII” reorganizes ecclesiastical territories in northern India: he carves out specified districts from the then-archdiocese of Delhi and Simla, erects a new diocese of Simla (Simla–Ambala), assigns it as suffragan to Delhi, designates the cathedral, defines episcopal revenues, orders a seminary and chapter (or diocesan consultors), prescribes canonical governance norms, and entrusts execution to the “Apostolic Internuncio” and the “Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith”, declaring all contrary provisions null.

A traditional Catholic bishop in liturgical vestments holding a Latin decree, standing in front of a historic Mexican church with stained-glass windows depicting the Sacred Heart of Jesus and scenes from the lives of the saints.

VERAE CRUCIS — TEHUANTEPECENSIS (1959.05.23)

The Latin text attributed to John XXIII announces, in bureaucratic curial style, the erection of a new territorial structure in Mexico: by detaching municipalities from the Archdiocese of Veracruz and the Diocese of Tehuantepec, it fabricates the Diocese of “San Andrés Tuxtla,” assigns its boundaries, subjects it as suffragan to Veracruz, prescribes a seminary, cathedral chapter, and canonical administration, and wraps the whole in standard juridical formulas of apostolic authority and penalties for non-compliance. In reality, this apparently harmless territorial decree is one of the early juridical instruments of the conciliar usurpation: a cold, administrative act that presupposes—with no proof and against the faith—the legitimacy of the new “pontiff,” and silently organizes the ecclesial battlefield on which the revolution against the Kingship of Christ and the pre-1958 Church will soon be executed.

A solemn Catholic bishop holds the papal bull announcing the erection of the Diocese of Tlaxcala in 1959, with a backdrop of the historic Tlaxcala cathedral and Mexican landscape.

ANGELORUM-MEXICANAE (1959.05.23)

The constitution ANGELORUM — MEXICANAE, issued by John XXIII on 23 May 1959, announces the erection of the new territorial structure called the “Diocese of Tlaxcala,” carved from the territories of Puebla (“Angelorum”) and Mexico City. It details boundaries, designates Tlaxcala as episcopal see with St Joseph’s as cathedral, orders at least an elementary seminary, prescribes sending the best students to the Pontifical Latin American College in Rome, sets norms for the cathedral chapter or diocesan consultors, defines the economic base of the “episcopal mensa,” and entrusts execution to the Apostolic Delegate. In one phrase: this solemn and juridical-sounding act is the administrative signature sealing the prelude to the conciliar usurpation—an apparently innocent reconfiguration of ecclesiastical geography that in fact prefigures the transformation of dioceses into the future infrastructure of the conciliar sect.

Varia

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