Antilegacy of John XXIII – johnxxiii.antichurch.org

Antipopes of the Antichurch

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Interior view of the historic church of St. Dominic in Arezzo, Italy, showcasing its medieval architecture and sacred art, including a Cimabue crucifix.

Praeclarissimum (1960.04.07)

The document attributed to John XXIII celebrates the thirteenth-century parish church of St Dominic in Arezzo for its architecture, artistic treasures (notably the crucifix by Cimabue), historical associations with the Dominican Order, and its liturgical life; on this basis, it grants the title and juridical privileges of a Minor Basilica, invoking the alleged plenitude of apostolic power and declaring the act firm, valid, and perpetually binding. This seemingly pious decree is in fact a revealing fragment of the new cult of aesthetics and institutional self-affirmation by which the conciliar revolution cloaked its usurpation of authority and its silent apostasy from the Kingship of Christ.

A Catholic bishop kneeling in prayer before a statue of St. Joseph with the Child Jesus and the Virgin Mary in a reverent chapel.

Beatus Ioseph (1960.04.07)

The document attributed to John XXIII briefly confirms St Joseph, Spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Confessor, as the principal heavenly Patron of the Diocese of Cúcuta. It invokes Joseph’s guardianship of the Divine Infant and Our Lady, notes the petition of Bishop Paulus Correa León and his clergy and flock, and, by alleged “apostolic authority,” confirms and declares St Joseph as patron with corresponding liturgical honors, nullifying any contrary provisions.

Archbishop Carlo Maria Martini in the historic Biblioteca Ambrosiana surrounded by ancient manuscripts and sacred books, with faint images of St. Ambrose and St. Charles Borromeo in the background.

Religio bonaeque (1960.03.16)

The document issued by the usurper John XXIII under the title Religio bonaeque is a brief Latin act by which he designates the Archbishop of Milan pro tempore as perpetual Patron of the Ambrosian Library. It praises Cardinal Federico Borromeo’s foundation of the Biblioteca Ambrosiana, celebrates the Church’s support for letters and the arts, recalls that the Holy See has always favoured this institution, cites Paul V’s dispositions about episcopal oversight, and then confers in sweeping juridical language the formal patronage on whoever holds the Ambrosian See, with the usual clauses of perpetuity, validity, and nullity of contrary acts.

A Catholic bishop in traditional attire holding a document titled Apostolici muneris in a reverent study with a Nordic landscape outside.

Apostolici muneris (1960.03.01)

The document attributed to John XXIII, entitled Apostolici muneris (1 March 1960), decrees the erection of an Apostolic Delegation in “Scandia” with jurisdiction over Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland, seated in Copenhagen. It presents this act as a pastoral instrument of Roman primatial solicitude, intended to strengthen and expand “the Christian name” and “true religion” in territories separated from the Chair of Peter.

Varia

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Antipope John XXIII
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