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Thursday, April 15, 2010

What to do When the World’s on Fire


As Western Civilization falls into ruin, twelve Catholic leaders from Europe and America will come together this summer to ask one question:
“Are we going to just accept the Godless political and social system, or will we take a stand for Christ the King and a Christian vision of man and society?”
Come to Italy this summer and let's answer that question together!

By Michael J. Matt,

Editor,
The Remnant

“These are the times that try men’s souls”. The colonial amy was freezing at Valley Forge when Thomas Paine penned these famous words in his pamphlet American Crisis. His aim was to encourage his countrymen to stay in the fight despite the terrible hardships of war and dismal prospects for the future.

I have little in common with the author of Common Sense who dismissed the Bible as false and condemned Christian doctrines as immoral. But I quite agree with Mr. Paine that certain periods in history do indeed try men’s souls, and ours is shaping up to be the granddaddy of them all. I’d call my pamphlet World Crisis for the world we once knew is now in flames and from its ashes something apocalyptic seems likely to rise up.

It’s not only tradition-minded Catholics who are concerned. The radio, television, Internet provide 24/7 commentary on a global state of anxiety afflicting the “enlightened” and the rest of us alike. Whether you’re a home-school parent waiting for “child services” to ring, or a public school teacher wondering if you’ll be knifed in the cafeteria, or a Christian trying to stay alive in Palestine, or an inner city mother trying to enjoy urban renewal while dodging bullets on a nightly basis—you’ve got to be brave in this new world.

War, famine, earthquakes, civil unrest, economic collapse, rampant immorality—no wonder people are a bit edgy. And every day the news brings more of the same: angry mobs in the streets, teachers exploiting their students, doctors euthanizing their patients, Catholics indicting their priests, Moslems bombing synagogues, Christians fleeing the Holy Land in terror, and now devils dressed in Armani trying to lynch the Holy Father.


Ah, yes, the media have found their collective conscience. They’re shocked—shocked!—to discover a sexual abuse scandal in the Church that emerged more than eight years ago, and which they had already covered and forgotten only to realize—just a moment!—we can use this against Benedict. These are the same moral watchdogs that call us “haters” if we object to “reformed” sex offenders being relocated in our neighborhoods; who ignore the prevalence of sexual abuse in all areas of “enlightened” society today, and that, among clerical offenders, Catholic priests are least likely to offend. These guardians of the moral order accuse grandmothers of “hate speech” for objecting to Catholic adoption agencies placing Catholic children with homosexual couples; view condom distribution in grade schools as an issue of national security, and broadcast Lady Gaga videos night and day depicting borderline necrophilia, lesbianism and violence to children. And, above all, these are the same moral authorities who agitate for tax-funded abortion on demand.

Yes, these guys are shocked—shocked—that thirty years ago Archbishop Ratzinger didn't read the memo about a sexually abusive priest who was sent to “therapy.” They're all about the truth....And if you buy that one I’ve got a bridge to sell.

“The Bad Shepherd” screamed the headline in the latest Newsweek, just above a picture of a “cold” and “aloof” Holy Father and a vicious concluding paragraph: “What’s needed, really, is a new vision for a church that is more human. Is Benedict the man to provide that? Alas, probably not.”

Get it? What’s needed is an even wider opening of Catholic windows to the modern world. What’s needed is less dogma and more Darwin to help the Church “evolve” into something that might actually benefit the common good someday.


From the New York Times to the London Times to the Sydney Herald, it’s open season on the Catholic Church. And even traditional Catholics—historic defenders of the papacy—find themselves between a rock and hard place. Clearly, a witch hunt is under way in which Pope Benedict is the target, but it’s not as if the disastrous policies of the last forty years aren’t responsible for all of this: the dismal formation of priests, watered down moral theology, the pooh-poohing of sin and hell, face-to-face confession (“let’s just chat”), relocating predator priests, encouraging homosexuality in the priesthood, and establishing an utterly emasculated liturgy. Faux media outrage aside, we know that the Church is reaping the whirlwind—exactly as traditional Catholics predicted she would forty years ago.

Our cause has never been about “liturgical preferences”, but rather the defense of the Church against the very policies of ecclesial auto-demolition that are now threatening to bring the Church to her knees and put Peter in chains.

Still, it must be said that Pope Benedict has done more than any other Pope since Vatican II (including John Paul ‘The Great’!) to actually address the madness running rampant since 1965. High-profile media darling, Father Gino Burresi, for example, the Italian founder of the Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, was barred from public ministry under a cloud of suspicion of sexual misconduct—immediately after the election of Pope Benedict XVI. As Vatican insider, John Allen, pointed out in his column,
When the same axe fell a few months later on Mexican priest Marcial Maciel Degollado, the high-profile founder of the Legionaries of Christ, against whom accusations of abuse had likewise been hanging around for the better part of a decade, the message seemed unmistakable: There’s a new sheriff in town. In retrospect, the Burresi and Maciel cases crystallized a remarkable metamorphosis in Joseph Ratzinger vis-à-vis the sexual abuse crisis. As late as November 2002, well into the eruption in the United States, he seemed just another Roman cardinal in denial. Yet as pope, Benedict XVI became a Catholic Elliot Ness—disciplining Roman favorites long regarded as untouchable, meeting sex abuse victims in both the United States and Australia, embracing “zero tolerance” policies once viewed with disdain in Rome, and openly apologizing for the carnage caused by the crisis.
Strange! There’s been nothing about this in the New York Times!

What’s next? It’s anyone’s guess. Today a reporter from the local Fox affiliate gave me a call. He’s doing a story on Christian hate groups and the militia movement here in Minnesota: “Since The Remnant has been designated a hate group,” he said, “I wanted to ask you a few questions.” Well naturally!

I wonder if this reporter will recognize the insanity of tradition-minded Catholics being portrayed as dangerous haters while militant Islamic groups are coddled, powerful street gangs control large sections of U.S. cities, the public school system is cranking out entire generations of drug and sex addicted waifs who are criminally undereducated, and abortion providers are held up as pillars of the community.

What is to be done? Pray, of course. Humanly speaking, there’s no way out of here. But we also make every effort to forge alliances against those who would destroy our Church. The scourging of Pope Benedict is all about one thing: gagging the last whimper of moral authority in the world today. Once they’ve silenced the Catholic Church the feeding frenzy on all things Christian can begin in earnest and it will become difficult to imagine how the End Times could be much worse than ours.

The good news? We’re not there yet and there’s time to mount an intellectual and spiritual offensive. And even as the Tea Party movement indicates a long-awaited (if limited) awakening among the American people, so too does the speaker roster for John Rao’s summer symposium in Italy indicate an awakening among Catholics
. (See PDF ad)

This event confirms one of the few bits of good news we can cull from a tsunami of bad—Catholic men are joining forces. Men from Rome, Spain, South America, London, New York, Dallas, the Midwest are coming together to make the voice of the Catholic Church heard over the din of war. The home school movement is strong, thanks be to God; the old Mass is being largely restored, thanks be to God. What’s desperately needed now is the restoration of Catholic philosophy and political thought—the foundation stones for any lasting restoration. And this is what Dr. Rao and his team are all about.

The Republicans and conservatives just spent millions on their Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington, D.C., and what did it accomplish? Limited support for tea partiers, more demands for the safeguarding of “liberties” granted us by Masonic decree, and further kowtowing to the gay lobby. Certainly, Christ the King wasn’t mentioned. God bless them, they mean well; but they haven’t a clue what to do about the storm clouds of militant secularism and atheism gathering menacingly over the “shining city on the hill.” No, Virginia, lower taxes ain’t gonna cut it!

What’s needed is a Catholic political action conference. And that’s precisely what’s going to take place on the Shores of Lake Garda in Italy this coming July.

As a Catholic philosopher, historian and master of the Church’s Social Teaching, John Rao does have the solution—the tried and true solution that over the course of millennia worked for the common good of the whole world and led to the high point of man’s existence. Trouble is, Dr. Rao is digging quarters out of his couch cushions trying to establish a venue from where those Catholic solutions can be most effectively shouted from the housetops.

What he wants to do is simple: Bring Catholic intellectuals, writers, and men and women from all walks together to proclaim the Kingship of Christ, to swear fealty to the timeless magisterium of the Church, and to preserve the intellectual integrity of the Catholic worldview at a time when nearly the entire world has abandoned it. He’s found a venue which is centrally located enough to encourage men and women from Europe and America to come together, strategize and prepare a serious response to the growing assaults against the Church and the followers of Christ.

At the moment, Dr. Rao is only a few thousand dollars short of being able to pull off what could be billed as the traditional Catholic answer to CPAC, which is why I’m begging Remnant readers to consider helping him out. Sign up for his event. Bring the children, the older folks; come and see this re-creation of Christendom in microcosm in a charming Italian village. Hear Mass every day, listen to lectures, and network with Catholics from all over the world. Dr. Rao is reaching beyond the camps of traditionalism, strictly speaking, and attempting to forge alliances between all Catholics who are willing to stand up and fight for Christ the King at this desperate moment in history.

If you can’t make it to Garda please consider supporting The Roman Forum’s tax-exempt foundation with a donation that will help Dr. Rao and his team make this event a reality and maybe, please God, change history in the process.

On September 6, 1860, the papal army suffered a crushing defeat in battle at Castelfidardo. The papacy was under vicious attack, and it seemed there wasn’t anyone in Europe left to defend it. That’s when God raised up a number of Catholic intellectuals who came to Rome to put themselves at the service of Pius IX. The course of history was altered, this time for the better.

Something similar will at least take root at Gardone Riviera. The Holy Father, the papacy, the entire Catholic tradition is under siege and now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their Church. The rendezvous is in Italy this summer. Please see all relevant contact information for registering and/or donating here. Contact Dr. Rao today drjcrao@aol.com or at (212) 645-2971 and consider allying yourself with this program of genuine Catholic action. Let’s take the Traditional Catholic cause to the next level.


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