Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

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Bishop Aloysius Stepinac in prayer before a crucifix in a war-torn church in Zagreb, symbolizing his perseverance and faith under communist persecution.

Abeunte tibi (1959.06.14)

Dated 14 June 1959, this brief Latin letter of John XXIII to Aloysius Stepinac marks the 25th anniversary of Stepinac’s episcopal consecration. John XXIII congratulates him for his supposed piety, firmness, charity towards the persecuted, defense of Catholic doctrine, and patience in suffering, praises Pius XII’s creation of him as cardinal, spiritualizes his isolation and trials, and imparts his “apostolic blessing” to Stepinac, his auxiliaries, clergy, and faithful of Zagreb. In doing so, the text canonizes not sanctity, but an already advanced state of ecclesial disorientation, using Stepinac’s real sufferings as a backdrop for the rising cult of the conciliar revolution’s founding figure.

Depiction of Pope St. Gregory VII presiding over the 1059 Lateran Synod with Canons Regular of St. Augustine in traditional habits.

Epistula ad Ludovicum Severinum Haller (1959.05.25)

This Latin letter, issued in 1959 by antipope John XXIII to Louis Severin Haller (titular “bishop” of Bethlehem and Abbot Primate of the Canons Regular of St. Augustine), commemorates the ninth centenary of the 1059 Lateran Synod and encourages the Canons Regular to celebrate their history, strengthen their confederation, promote liturgy, pastoral work, learning, common life, Augustinian charity, and strict observance of religious discipline within their communities.

Portrait of Benedict Aloisi Masella receiving jubilee honors at the Lateran Basilica with a marble monument to the Blessed Virgin Mary

Epistula ad Benedictum Aloisi Masella (1959.05.24)

John XXIII’s 1959 Latin letter to Benedict Aloisi Masella, then “cardinal,” bishop of Palestrina, archpriest of the Lateran Basilica, and prefect of the “Sacred Congregation for the Discipline of the Sacraments,” congratulates him on his approaching 80th birthday and the 40th anniversary of his episcopate. It praises the local clergy and faithful for planning solemn public celebrations, notes with particular satisfaction the inauguration of a marble monument in Palestrina in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the renewal of the consecration of the people to her Immaculate Heart, and grants Masella the faculty, on the set day and after a pontifical Mass, to impart in John’s name a plenary indulgence to the faithful under the usual conditions. The text closes with the “Apostolic Blessing.”

Archbishop James Duhig reading a letter from John XXIII in St. Stephen's Cathedral, Brisbane

A A A LA IOANNES PP. XXIII EPISTULA AD IACOBUM DUHIG… (1959.05.17)

At the end of the first century of the Brisbane ecclesiastical structure, John XXIII addresses James Duhig with courteous praise for a century of institutional expansion: new dioceses, parishes, churches, schools, hospitals, charitable works, capped by the dedication of a provincial seminary named after Pius XII. He attributes this growth to divine favour, exhorts to deeper charity, obedience to pastors, moral integrity, and zeal “for the name and glory of Jesus Christ,” and imparts an “apostolic” blessing to the hierarchy and faithful of Queensland.

Varia

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Antipope John XXIII
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