Antipopes of the Antichurch


















Timeline of this heretical pontiff
Encyclical Letters
+ 15 posts1959
+ 7 posts1961
+ 4 posts1962
+ 2 posts1963
+ 2 postsApostolic Exhortations
+ 3 postsApostolic Constitutions
+ 93 posts1958
+ 6 posts1959
+ 87 postsMotu Proprio
+ 15 posts1958
+ 1 posts1959
+ 1 posts1962
+ 11 postsApostolic Letters
+ 151 posts1958
+ 4 posts1959
+ 63 posts1960
+ 78 posts1961
+ 1 posts1962
+ 4 posts1963
+ 1 postsSpeeches
+ 99 posts1958
+ 2 posts1959
+ 26 posts1960
+ 29 posts1961
+ 16 posts1962
+ 24 postsMessages
+ 6 posts1959
+ 4 postsHomilies
+ 4 postsLetters
+ 152 posts1958
+ 1 posts1959
+ 48 posts1960
+ 32 posts1961
+ 31 posts1962
+ 30 posts1963
+ 10 postsNot categorized
+ 1 posts1958
+ 1 postsNews feed


Octogesimum natalem (1962.10.18)
This brief Latin letter of John XXIII congratulates Cardinal André Jullien on his approaching eightieth birthday. John praises Jullien’s juridical expertise, service in the Roman Rota, virtues of piety and modesty, and imparts an “Apostolic Blessing,” asking God to protect and console him in this life and the next.


Cum omne (1962.07.24)
On July 24, 1962, the usurper John XXIII issued the Latin letter “Cum omne” to Augustin Bea, on the occasion of Bea’s fiftieth priestly anniversary. The text showers Bea with praise for his priestly ministry, exalts his role in preparing the so-called Second Vatican Council and as head of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, grants him faculties to impart blessings and indulgences connected with jubilee celebrations, and ends with a standard “apostolic” blessing. Under a thin devotional veneer, this short letter glorifies the architect of doctrinal dilution and elevates an ecumenical program that directly contradicts the integral Catholic faith, thereby exposing the spiritual decomposition operative at the heart of the conciliar revolution.


Causa praeclara (1962.07.16)
This Latin letter of antipope John XXIII, addressed to Cardinal Cento as his legate to Ávila for the fourth centenary of St. Teresa of Jesus’ Carmelite reform, is a solemn panegyric of Teresa, an exhortation to the Teresian family to fidelity to contemplative life, and a pious framing of her reform as a providential flowering parallel to Trent and as spiritual support for the then-upcoming Vatican II; it culminates in the wish that the Council bring forth a “new springtime” of beauty and renewal in the Church, allegedly obtained through the prayers and penances of Teresian Carmel. In reality, this text instrumentalizes St. Teresa’s authentic Catholic mysticism to bless the conciliar revolution, masking, under an odor of incense and rhetoric, a program that subverts the very doctrine and ascetical-theological principles she defended.


Duplicis anniversariae memoriae (1962.07.11)
The text is a Latin letter of the usurper John XXIII to Joseph Urtasun, Avignon, marking the 600th anniversaries of Innocent VI’s death and Blessed Urban V’s election. It praises the Avignon popes’ personal virtues, their governance from exile, their support of learning, their efforts to restore discipline, pacify rulers, and return to Rome, and it culminates by exhorting the faithful to esteem the Roman Pontificate as supreme spiritual fatherhood and to unite in prayer for the then-upcoming Second Vatican Council as a source of spiritual renewal for the whole human family. In reality, this short composition is a carefully polished manifesto of the conciliar sect’s self-legitimization: it uses true Catholic titles and concepts to crown a counterfeit papacy and prepare the ideological stage for the most destructive pseudo-council in history.
Varia
Announcement:
– News feed –implemented
– Antipopes separate web sites with their all documents refutation – in progress
