Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

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A solemn depiction of a traditional Catholic bishop in Avignon, holding a manuscript of Duplicis Anniversariae, in a historic church setting.

Duplicis anniversariae (1962.07.11)

The document is a Latin letter of John XXIII to Joseph Urtasun, “archbishop” of Avignon, commemorating the 600th anniversary of the death of Innocent VI and the election of “Blessed” Urban V. John XXIII praises both Avignon pontiffs as models of ecclesiastical discipline, learning, peace-making, and attachment to the papal office, and uses their memory to exhort the faithful to venerate and adhere to the Roman Pontificate in view of the impending Second Vatican Council, presenting the “Holy See” as the unique center of unity and hope for a disoriented world. In reality, this polished panegyric is a programmatic apologia for the conciliar usurpation of authority, built on selective history, hollow rhetoric, and a deliberate instrumentalization of true papal titles in the mouth of one who was already dismantling the very papacy he invokes.

A traditional Carmelite nun in prayer before a statue of St. Teresa of Jesus in Ávila, Spain.

Causa praeclara (1962.07.16)

This Latin letter of John XXIII appoints Cardinal Cento as his legate to preside at celebrations in Ávila for the 400th anniversary of St. Teresa of Jesus’ Carmelite reform, extols Teresa’s contemplative and ascetical renewal, praises Carmel’s hidden apostolate of prayer and sacrifice for souls, and links Teresian spirituality to the then-upcoming Second Vatican Council with the hope of a “new springtime” in the Church. From the perspective of integral Catholic faith, this apparently pious tribute functions as a carefully perfumed veil over the conciliar revolution, instrumentalizing St. Teresa to bless the emerging neo-church that John XXIII was constructing against the Faith of Trent and all pre-1958 Magisterium.

Cardinal Augustin Bea in traditional Jesuit and cardinal's vestments, holding a Latin document in a dimly lit church with stained glass windows depict the Crucifixion.

Cum omne (1962.07.24)

This brief Latin letter of John XXIII congratulates Augustin Bea, a Jesuit and key architect of the ecumenical agenda, on the 50th anniversary of his priestly ordination. It praises Bea’s priestly service, highlights his role as President of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity in preparation for the so-called Second Vatican Council, invokes pious formulae about priesthood and Christ, and grants him faculties to impart blessings and a plenary indulgence on the occasion of the jubilee.

Solemn celebration of Cardinal Iacobus Aloisius Copello's 60th anniversary of priestly ordination with John XXIII's Latin letter in a traditional Vatican chapel reflecting conciliar apostasy.

Sexagesimam anniversariam (1962.09.25)

This brief Latin letter of John XXIII congratulates Cardinal Iacobus Aloisius Copello on the 60th anniversary of his priestly ordination: it recalls his long ministry, especially as archbishop of Buenos Aires, praises his diligence and piety, thanks God for his gifts, invokes further merits for Copello in his role as Chancellor of the Roman Church, and imparts an apostolic blessing on him and those celebrating the jubilee. Its entire horizon, however, is that of an already subverted hierarchy mutually confirming itself in human honors while remaining silent about the integral Catholic faith, the gravity of apostasy, and the rights of Christ the King, revealing the spiritual emptiness and internal contradiction of the conciliar project it serves.

Varia

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