Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

Timeline of this heretical pontiff

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A reverent Catholic scene depicting the elevation of the Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Guadalajara to concathedra status, reflecting both tradition and foreboding doctrinal change.

Seguntinae (1959.03.09)

The Latin text under review, issued in 1959 by Angelo Roncalli as “Ioannes PP. XXIII,” is a brief juridical act which: (1) adds the title “Guadalajarensis” to the Diocese of Sigüenza, (2) elevates the church of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Guadalajara to the rank of concathedra, and (3) regulates residence and canonical functions of the local clergy, all in conformity with the 1953 concordat between the Holy See and Spain. It is presented as a serene pastoral adjustment, grounded in alleged growth of “Christian life” in Guadalajara and expressed in the solemn formula of apostolic authority. In reality, this apparently innocuous document already exhibits the juridical presumption, ecclesiology, and political alignments of the emerging conciliar revolution, which make it the formal signature of a man who had already begun to serve not the Kingship of Christ but the architecture of the coming neo-church.

Image of the historic Diocese of Osma (Oxomensis-Soriana) in Spain, featuring the church of St. Peter in Soria as a concathedral with a traditional Catholic bishop and faithful.

Oxomensis (Soriana) (1959.03.09)

The document attributed to Ioannes XXIII, titled “Constitutio Apostolica Oxomensis (Soriana),” decrees that the historic Diocese of Osma in Spain shall henceforth bear the compound name “Oxomensis-Soriana,” and that the church of St Peter in Soria is elevated to the rank of concathédral, with corresponding rights, honors, and obligations, to be implemented under the authority of the Apostolic Nuncio according to the 1953 Concordat with Spain. It presents itself as a routine administrative reconfiguration ordered by a “Supreme Pontiff” for the pastoral good of souls, solemnized in juridical language and sealed with the external forms of papal authority.

Pope John XXIII presenting the apostolic constitution 'Oriolensis' to clerics in front of Orihuela Cathedral and St. Nicholas Concathedral in Alicante, Spain.

Oriolensis (1959.03.09)

The document under review is an apostolic constitution of John XXIII, dated 9 March 1959, by which the existing Diocese of Orihuela in Spain is granted a concathedral in Alicante (St Nicholas) and its title expanded to Oriolensis-Lucentina. It outlines juridical provisions: extension of the diocesan name, elevation of St Nicholas to concathedral status with corresponding rights and duties, residence faculty for the bishop in Alicante, canonical functions for clergy there, and a standard curial clause declaring the act perpetually binding and nullifying all contrary dispositions.

Traditional Catholic bishop praying in St. Julian's Church in Ferrol, Spain, with Mondoñedo in the background.

Mindoniensis (Ferrolensis) (1959.03.09)

This apostolic constitution issued under the name of John XXIII superficially concerns an administrative modification: the addition of “Ferrolensis” to the title of the diocese of Mondoñedo, the elevation of the church of St. Julian in Ferrol to the dignity of co-cathedral, and the faculty for the local ordinary to reside there. Beneath the appearance of harmless canonical pragmatism, the text reveals the already-operating principles of the conciliar revolution: a technocratic reconfiguration of ecclesiastical structures detached from the supernatural end of the Church, drafted and promulgated by one who, by his doctrine and subsequent acts, manifested adhesion to condemned errors, and therefore could not speak with the authority of the Roman Pontiff.

Varia

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