Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

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A traditional Catholic depiction of the Blessed Virgin Mary as the heavenly patroness of Oudtshoorn, with a solemn Latin Mass in a historic church.

EO CONTENDENTES (1960.12.16)

Ad perpetuam rei memoriam: this brief Latin act of John XXIII, EO CONTENDENTES, dated 16 December 1960, declares the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Immaculate Heart as the “principal heavenly patroness” of the diocese of Oudtshoorn (erected in 1951), assigning her the liturgical honors proper to a diocesan primary patron and invoking her protection and intercession for the spread of “the Kingdom of Christ” and the strengthening of Catholics in holiness. Behind this apparently pious Marian gesture, however, stands the already active program of conciliar subversion, sentimental Marian rhetoric instrumentalized to legitimize an authority devoid of Catholic substance, and a juridical formula that presupposes a power usurped and bent to the service of the emerging neo-church.

A Catholic rural scene depicting a peasant family praying with an open letter Agri culturam by antipope John XXIII on a wooden table, St. Isidore in a radiant nimbus, emphasizing piety over Christ's social kingship.

Agri culturam (1960.12.16)

Agri culturam is a brief Latin letter by antipope John XXIII, dated 16 December 1960, in which he extols agriculture with citations from Augustine and Cicero and, at the request of Enrique Pla y Deniel, designates St Isidore the Farmer as heavenly patron of all agricultural workers of Spain, confirming the usual liturgical privileges for such patronage.
Beneath its pious veneer, this text exemplifies the conciliatory, horizontal, and ultimately subversive spirit that paved the way for the conciliar revolution and the occupation of Catholic forms by a neo-church stripped of the social Kingship of Christ.

A solemn image of the Basilica of Notre Dame de Joie in Pontivy, France, depicting pilgrims in traditional attire praying before the Gothic architecture on a crisp autumn day.

Gaudii Nuntia (1959.01.10)

In this Latin document dated 10 January 1959, John XXIII (Roncalli) confers the title and privileges of a Minor Basilica upon the parish church of “Notre Dame de Joie” in Pontivy (diocese of Vannes), extolling the ancient Marian devotion there, the architecture, the state recognition as historic monument, the crowning of the image by Pius XII, and the supposed protection granted during the 1696 cholera epidemic; he concludes by invoking the fullness of “Apostolic” authority to decree this dignity in perpetuity. This apparently benign act is in fact a concentrated manifesto of juridical usurpation, sentimentality, and pre-conciliar-looking but radically subverted ecclesiology, preparing the way for the conciliar revolution against the Kingship of Christ and the true Marian cult.

A serene depiction of the Patriarchal Basilica of St. Mark in Venice, highlighting its religious significance and traditional liturgical elements.

Opere nobilissimo (1959.01.14)

The document issued by John XXIII on 14 January 1959, titled “Opere nobilissimo,” grants plenary and partial indulgences, as well as privileged altars, to the Patriarchal Basilica of St. Mark in Venice. It recalls his personal attachment as former patriarch, evokes earlier grants by Alexander III and St. Pius X, and sets precise conditions for the faithful to obtain indulgences by visiting the basilica, confessing, receiving Holy Communion, and praying “for the intentions of the Supreme Pontiff.”

Varia

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