Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

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Image of Pope John XXIII and Cardinal Amleto Giovanni Cicognani exchanging a congratulatory letter with the Vatican in the background, symbolizing bureaucratic praise and doctrinal emptiness.

Octogesimum mox (1963.02.24)

The text under review is a short Latin congratulatory letter from John XXIII to Amleto Giovanni Cicognani on the occasion of Cicognani’s approaching 80th birthday, sent in February 1963, praising his diligence in handling the “public affairs of the Church,” recalling his curial and diplomatic services (especially as Delegate in the USA and in matters concerning the Eastern Churches and Vatican II), and imparting an “Apostolic” blessing. It is a self-referential, courtly panegyric that silently presupposes the legitimacy of the conciliar revolution it serves.

An image depicting the University of Ferrara's inauguration ceremony led by Giovanni Cicognani for John XXIII, highlighting the tension between Catholic tradition and modern secularization.

Ex obsequii (1963.02.12)

The letter “Ex obsequii” is a brief Latin note in which John XXIII congratulates the University of Ferrara on inaugurating its new seat, delegates Giovanni Cicognani as his representative, extols the institution’s historical pedigree and scientific mission, invokes God with a generic biblical formula, and imparts an “Apostolic Blessing” to authorities, professors, and students. Beneath its courteous academic style, this text is a distilled manifesto of naturalistic, horizontal religion: it glorifies autonomous “science,” flatters secular institutions, and silences the Kingship of Christ, the necessity of the true Faith, and the exclusive rights of the Church, thereby betraying the perennial Magisterium in favour of the conciliar cult of man.

A traditional Catholic scene of Carlo Forni's elevation to the College of Cardinals by John XXIII in a solemn Vatican ceremony.

Epistula ad Ephraem Forni (1963.02.09)

This Latin letter of John XXIII, issued on 9 February 1963, is a brief congratulatory note addressed to Carlo (Ephrem) Forni on the double jubilee of his priesthood and episcopate, praising his loyal diplomatic service to the Holy See (especially in Ecuador, Belgium, and Luxembourg), justifying his elevation to the “College of Cardinals,” and imparting an “apostolic blessing” while invoking divine grace upon his past and future labours.
In reality, this seemingly pious compliment encapsulates the essence of the conciliar mutation: the reduction of the Church’s supernatural mission to diplomatic careerism, bureaucratic flattery, and a counterfeit “apostolic” authority issuing from an antipope presiding over a paramasonic neo-church.

A traditional Catholic scene of antipope John XXIII presenting a letter to Archbishop Tatsuō Doi in Tokyo's grand cathedral.

Quamvis nullum (1963.01.20)

Quamvis nullum is a Latin congratulatory letter in which antipope John XXIII praises Tatsuō Doi, then Tokyo archbishop, on the 25th anniversary of his episcopal ordination. In it, he extols Doi as a model prelate, emphasizes the supposed flourishing of Catholicism in Japan, rejoices in having created him a “cardinal,” and encourages the construction of a new principal church as a lasting monument of his piety, attaching a plenary indulgence to the jubilee celebration. Behind the pious verbiage lies the naked program of the conciliar sect: self-celebration of its hierarchy, naturalistic optimism, and the silent replacement of the Kingship of Christ with ecclesiastical careerism and architectural prestige.

Varia

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Antipope John XXIII
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