Revised: Compare and Contrast
        by 
        Thomas A. Droleskey
        [2013 Preface: This article was written seven years ago, that is, in the year 2006. It has undergone a little tweaking here and there. What I want to emphasize in the preface to the 2012 posting, however, is that the examples of Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI's and Jorge Mario Bergoglio's praise of false religions, something that stands in stark contrast to the work of Saint Hyacinth, are not exhaustive. Numerous articles of mine in the past few years have detailed Ratzinger/Benedict's violation of the First and Second Commandments as he has praised one false religion after another and called their places of false worship as "sacred." A number of similar articles have been written in the past five months about the offenses given to the honor and glory and majesty of the Most Blessed Trinity by Ratzinger/Benedict's successors, Jorge Mario Bergoglio/Francis.
[Here are just a few of those articles:  Saints and Idols: No Room for "Coexistence", No Such Thing as a Small Sacrilege, Asking Our Lady to Repair the Damage,  Keep Focused on Root Causes, Words and Actions of Antichrist, How Catholics Act and Speak in Jerusalem, "When He  Cometh, Shall He Find, Think You, Faith on Earth?", Apologizing to Everyone Save For God Himself, Pope Saint Pius V and the Conversion of the Muslims, Pope Saint Pius V and the Conversion of the Conciliarists, Mocking Pope Saint Pius X and Our Lady of Fatima, On Full Display: The Modernist Mind, Just Following Their "Pope's" Call for Cohesion, They're Screaming At Us: We're Not Catholic, With The Passage Of Time, Anti-Apostles All, Forever Prowling the World Seeking the Ruin of Souls, part 1, Forever Prowling the World Seeking The Ruin of Souls, part 2, Catholicism Is The Only Foundation of Personal and Social Order, Turning Perfection Aside For A More Perfect Banality, Get The Man A Mirror, Boy, If Only The "Pope" Knew, Boy, If Only The "Pope" Knew, partie deux, Fearing to Offend Men Rather Than God, Live By Separation of Church and State? Die By Separation of Church and State, Touchy, Touchy, As New Dog and Pony Shows Come To Town, part one, As New Dog and Pony Shows Come to Town, part two, As New Dog and Pony Shows Come To Town, part three, As New Dog and Pony Shows Come To Town, part four (the end), Chastisements Under Which We Must Save Our Souls, part one, Chastisements Under Which We Must Save Our Souls, part two, Chastisements Under Which We Must Save Our Souls, part three, One of Those "Is It Really Necessary To Write This Again" Articles, Revolutions Have Consequences, part one,  Revolutions Have Consequences, part two,  Another Year of the Same Conciliar Apostasy, part one, Another Year of the Same Conciliar Apostasy, part two,  Another Year of the Same Conciliar Apostasy, part three, Impressed With His Own Originality, Accepting "Popes" As Unreliable Teacher, Sixty Years of Priestly Apostasy, Tale of Two Benedicts,  "Purifying The Memory" In Order To Bury The Truth, Your Greatest Evil Resides In The Apostolic Palace, Breathing In The Spirits of Baal, Does This 
  Man Give Any Thought To His Particular Judgment?, Propagating Only What His Boss Believes and Teaches, part one, Propagating Only What His Boss Believes and Teaches, part two, Searching For That Which Has Been Revealed, Ratzinger  Should Just Canonize Himself And Be Done With It, Still Praising His First Saint, Nothing Stable, Nothing Secure Update, Preparing To Spend All Eternity With His Allegorical Figure, Mister Asteroid Is Looking Pretty Good Right About Now, Living In Fantasyland To The Very End, part one, Living In Fantasyland To The Very End, part two, Living In Fantasyland To The Very End, part three, Living In Fantasyland To The Very End, part four, Whittling Away At The Last Catholic Bastion, Victim Of His Own Obliviousness, Francis, The Talking Apostate, Francis The Lay Pope, Francis The Head Citizen Of The One World Ecumenical Church, Francis The Jansenist, Francis The Ostensibly Pious, Francis The Pagan, Francis The Feminist, Francis The Hun, Francis The Deceiver, Francis The Logician, Francis The Manichean, Francis The Blind, Francis The Illusionist, part one, Francis The Illusionist, part two, Francis The Illusionist, part three, Francis The Flexible,  Francis The Insidious Little Pest, Jorge Mario Bergoglio And His Friend, Justin Welby, Francis And Other Judases Abound In Holy Week, Francis And The Commissars, Francis The Revolutionary And His Dollies, Please Help Francis The Ecumenist, Do Not Permit Yourselves To Be Snookered, Another Day In The Life Of An Antichrist, No Matter A Difference In Style, One In Modernist Mind and Heart, One Heretic Speaks, Another Listens, Modernism Repackaged as Newness, Standing Firm In Defense Of Gallicanism, "You, Sir, Are A Pharisee!", So Much For Christus Vincit, Christus Regnat, Christus Imperat, Francis Takes Us To Ding Dong School Of Apostasy, Phoning It In, Don't Worry, Jorge, We Don't Take You Seriously As A Catholic In The Slightest, So Much For The Sandro Magister "Photo Op" Theory, Francis Do-Right, Francis The Liturgist, Francis At The Improv, Relax, Jorge, You're Not The Pope, Francis The Obsessed, Francis The Anti-Campion, Two For The Price Of One, part one, Two For The Price Of One, part two, Incompetent To Teach Squat About The Catholic Faith, part one, Incompetent To Teach Squat About The Catholic Faith, part two, Incompetent To Teach Squat About The Catholic Faith, part three, Where Does One Begin? part one, Where Does One Begin? part two, Where Does One Begin? part three, Dispensing With The Last Pretenses Of Catholicism, Francis The Anti-Apostle, Francis The Syncretist, Francis The Sillonist, Francis The Apostate: From Revolution To Anarchy, Francis The Pied Piper of Antichrist, Francis Says ¡Viva la Revolución!, part one, Francis Says ¡Viva la Revolución!, part two, Francis Says ¡Viva la Revolución!, part three, Francis The Self-Caricaturist, Francis Says ¡Viva la Revolución!, part four, Recruited By Antichrist To Be His Apologist, part two and Recruited By Antichrist To Be His Apologists, part three.)
[The apostasies and blasphemies emanating from 
  Ratzinger/Benedict were unremitting during his seven years, ten months, nine days as the head honcho of conciliarism He was relentless in violating the 
  binding precepts of the First and Second Commandments. Jorge Mario Bergoglio/Francis has served as a most worthy successor in this regard. The likes of 
  Saint Hyacinth, O.P., are not welcome in the counterfeit church of 
  concilairism.]
The Modernist mindset of conciliar revolutionaries such as Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict 
  XVI and Jorge Mario Bergoglio has been critiqued a number of times on this , site, something evidence by the multiplicity of links above. There is little of the Catholic Faith as it has been handed down 
  to us over the centuries under the infallible guidance of the Third 
  Person of the Blessed Trinity, God the Holy Ghost, that seems to bind 
  his conscience. Although he uses phrases familiar to Catholics and   
  holds his Hegelian views about the Faith very sincerely, Joseph 
  Ratzinger/Benedict XVI has a very long paper trail that puts him at odds
  with the defined teaching of the Catholic Church in a number of areas. 
One of the areas that places Ratzinger/Benedict XVI and Bergoglio/Francis have been at odds with the authentic patrimony of the Catholic Church is his belief that it is wrong for Catholics to seek to 
  proselytize Protestants or the Orthodox. They have also forbidden the 
  "targeting" of Jews for conversion. Ratzinger/Benedict has stated  that the Old 
  Testament could be read in a way that did not point definitively to Our 
  Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Ratzinger/Benedict thus believed that it is not a matter of urgency to seek the salvation of those 
  outside of the Catholic Church. He gave concrete proof of this almost 
  exactly eight years ago now when he said that the murdered Protestant 
  syncretist, "Brother" Roger Schutz of the Taize Ecumenical Community, 
  had attained eternal joy, something that the false "pontiff" reaffirmed 
  on more than one occasion (see Creating Ever More "Traditions" That Come From Hell).
Indeed, Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI has 
  demonstrated throughout his priestly life that he believes it is 
  possible for people of differing cultures and background to "work 
  together" for the common good without seeking to Catholicize every man 
  and every aspect of a nation's social life. He specifically and 
  categorically rejects the consistent teaching of the Catholic Church 
  that the civil state has an obligation to recognize her as the true 
  religion and base its policies with a view to the fostering of 
  conditions wherein citizens are better able to sanctify and thus to save
  their immortal souls. Ratzinger's  view of culture and of the civil 
  state are Modernist. They are the very views that were condemned by Pope
  Saint Pius X in Notre Charge Apostolique, August 15, 1910, a chief passage from which will be reproduced once again for the sake of emphasis:
 
  No, Venerable Brethren, We 
    must repeat with the utmost energy in these times of social and 
    intellectual anarchy when everyone takes it upon himself to teach as a 
    teacher and lawmaker - the City cannot be built otherwise than as God 
    has built it; society cannot be setup unless the Church lays the 
    foundations and supervises the work; no, civilization is not something 
    yet to be found, nor is the New City to be built on hazy notions; it has
    been in existence and still is: it is Christian civilization, it is the
    Catholic City. It has only to be set up and restored continually 
    against the unremitting attacks of insane dreamers, rebels and 
    miscreants. omnia instaurare in Christo. (Pope
  Saint Pius X,  Notre Charge Apostolique, August 15, 1910.)
Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI is possessed of all 
  manner of notions, some of them very hazy, some of them simply in 
  complete opposition to Catholic truth. He does not want the Catholic 
  City restored. Oh, no. He believes that the Church can coexist 
  "peacefully" with other religions without seeking to convert men in 
  false religions and without seeking to convert nations to the Social 
  Reign of Christ the King, a time whose "anchorage" has past and will 
  never return. 
Consider a German television interview with 
  Ratzinger/Benedict XVI. Taped on August 5, 2006, in Castel Gandolfo, the
  summer residence of the popes, and aired on August 14, 2006, the 
  interview reveals that the former Joseph Ratzinger is now who he has 
  always been: a man who believes he has a mission from God to "re-think" 
  the Catholic Faith in order to make it appealing to "modern" man. 
  Answering a question about his then forthcoming visit to his home state 
  of Bavaria in Germany, Benedict said: 
 
   Of course. The purpose of the visit is precisely 
    because I want to see again the places where I grew up, the people who 
    touched and shaped my life. I want to thank these people. Naturally I 
    also want to express a message that goes beyond my country, just as my 
    ministry calls me to do. I simply let the liturgical recurrences suggest
    the themes to me. The basic theme is that we have to rediscover God, 
    not just any God, but the God that has a human face, because when we see
    Jesus Christ we see God. Starting from this point we must find the way 
    to meet each other in the family, among generations, and then among 
    cultures and peoples as well. We must find the way to reconciliation and
    to peaceful coexistence in this world, the ways that lead to the 
    future. We won't find these ways leading to the future if we don't 
    receive light from above. So I didn't choose very specific themes, but 
    rather, it is the liturgy that leads me to express the basic message of 
    faith which naturally finds its place in everyday reality where we want 
    to search, above all, for cooperation among peoples and possible ways 
    that can lead us to reconciliation and peace. (Interview with Bayerische Rundfunk (ARD), ZDF, Deutsche Welle and Vatican Radio)
Peaceful coexistence? This is not a Catholic phrase, I
  am afraid. Saint Patrick did not believe in "peaceful coexistence" with
  the Druids. Saint Boniface did not believe in "peaceful coexistence" 
  with the false gods of Germany. Saint Hyacinth, whose feast is 
  celebrated today, August 17, did not believe in "peaceful coexistence" 
  with the pagans and the Orthodox. Each of these saints believed in the 
  conversion of men and of their nations to Catholic Faith. 
Peaceful coexistence? 
This is not a Catholic phrase, I
  am afraid. 
Oh yes, I remember the phrase well from my youth when I was
  a student at Saint Aloysius School in Great Neck, New York. The entire 
  student body prayed the Rosary every once in a while in practice air 
  raid drills, remembering to pray for the conversion of the Butcher of 
  the Ukraine who had popularized the phrase "peaceful coexistence" in the
  1950s, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Union of 
  Soviet Socialist Republics (from 1953 to 1964) and the Premier of the 
  same Soviet Union (from 1958-1964), Nikita S. Khrushchev. He is the one 
  who popularized the phrase "peaceful coexistence" in the 1950s. 
Ratzinger/Benedict and Jorge Mario Bergoglio/Francis act and speak as though that the
  patrimony of the Catholic Church has almost nothing to offer him 
  insofar as leading the world back to Our Lord as He has revealed Himself
  thorough His true Church. He is searching for the "light from above" to
  oppose the secularizing elements that have been abroad in the 
  world-at-large for the past five years or so, refusing to admit that Our 
  Lord has deposited His own teaching in this regard in the Catholic 
  Church alone, and that true popes prior to 1958 enunciated this teaching
  faithfully without its being "historically conditioned" so as to render
  its "particulars" "obsolete" over the course of time. 
No, Ratzinger/Benedict believes that the "opening to 
  the world" wrought by Angelo Roncalli/John XXIII in 1958 has ushered in a
  new era that requires new "adaptations" to be made to the "new" 
  circumstances in which "modern" man lives. Alas, this "opening to the 
  world" has resulted in a silencing of the Catholic voice, a renunciation
  of the importance of restoring the Catholic City, a deconstruction of 
  the Fatima Message, indeed, a wholesale revisionist history of the lives
  of the saints, including the martyrs of the first centuries of the 
  Church, in order to fit everything into the apostate framework that is 
  conciliarism and its demonic accommodationism to the spirit of the 
  world. 
Peaceful coexistence? 
Can Mortal Sin and Sanctifying 
  Grace coexist in the same soul? Can Our Lord's immutable truths coexist 
  in the world with beliefs that contradict those truths? Can the true 
  Church refuse to assert the truth that she alone is the only authentic 
  guide given us by God Himself as to what He has taught and how men are 
  to seek the sanctification of their souls, proving themselves to be good
  citizens of Heaven and of the nation in which they live? Can Catholics 
  and those who adhere to false religions (or to no religion) at all work 
  together for the betterment of society?
Judeo-Masonry answers those questions in the 
  affirmative. Conciliarism? Well, look at the words of the conciliar "popes" themselves. 
 Peaceful coexistence? 
A healthy 
  secularity? 
The belief that Jews, whose souls are in states of Original Sin, do not wait for the Messiah in vain? 
The belief that a murdered 
  Protestant syncretist goes straight to Heaven? 
The belief that false 
  religions and false beliefs can build up the better society? 
The belief 
  that a mountain upon which sits a Buddhist temple in Japan is "sacred"?  
The thoroughly condemned and anathematized belief that we can understand
  dogmatic truths differently at different points in time? 
Ratzinger/Benedict closed his interview seven years 
  ago by responding to a question about whether he had changed over the 
  years. His answer was indeed quite revealing:
   I've been taken apart 
    various times: in my first phase as professor and in the intermediate 
    phase, during my first phase as Cardinal and in the successive phase. 
    Now comes a new division. Of course circumstances and situations and 
    even people influence you because you take on different 
    responsibilities. Let's say that my basic personality and even my basic 
    vision have grown, but in everything that is essential I have remained identical. I'm happy that certain aspects that weren't noticed at first are now coming into the open. (Interview with Bayerische Rundfunk (ARD), ZDF, Deutsche Welle and Vatican Radio) 
  
In other words, the false 
  "pontiff," Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI remained  the same theologically 
  as "Pope Benedict XVI" as he was  when he was under suspicion of Modernism by the Holy Office 
  during the pontificate of Pope Pius XII. There had been no change in his
  thinking at all. He  used his considerable skill to advance his "new 
  thinking in the "Second" Vatican Council and to make it the "norm" of 
  the structures of the counterfeit church of conciliarism. His successor, Jorge Mario Bergoglio/Francis 
Begging your indulgence of the redundancy of quoting from Notre Charge Apostolique yet another time, I do so to point out the absolutely irreconcilable 
  nature of Pope Saint Pius X's condemnation of the spirit of Sillon, 
  which is the spirit of conciliarism, with the hazy, un-Catholic, 
  Modernist mind of "Pope" Benedict XVI: 
 
  The same applies to the notion of Fraternity which they found on the love of common interest or, beyond all philosophies and religions, on the mere notion of humanity, 
    thus embracing with an equal love and tolerance all human beings and 
    their miseries, whether these are intellectual, moral, or physical and 
    temporal. But Catholic doctrine tells us that the primary duty of 
    charity does not lie in the toleration of false ideas, however sincere 
    they may be, nor in the theoretical or practical indifference towards 
    the errors and vices in which we see our brethren plunged, but in 
    the zeal for their intellectual and moral improvement as well as for 
    their material well-being. Catholic doctrine further tells us that love 
    for our neighbor flows from our love for God, Who is Father to all, and 
    goal of the whole human family; and in Jesus Christ whose members we 
    are, to the point that in doing good to others we are doing good to 
    Jesus Christ Himself. Any other kind of love is sheer illusion, sterile 
    and fleeting.
  Indeed, we have the human experience of pagan and 
    secular societies of ages past to show that concern for common interests
    or affinities of nature weigh very little against the passions and wild
    desires of the heart. No, Venerable Brethren, there is no genuine 
    fraternity outside Christian charity. Through the love of God and His 
    Son Jesus Christ Our Saviour, Christian charity embraces all men, 
    comforts all, and leads all to the same faith and same heavenly 
    happiness.
  By separating fraternity from Christian charity 
    thus understood, Democracy, far from being a progress, would mean a 
    disastrous step backwards for civilization. If, as We desire with all 
    Our heart, the highest possible peak of well being for society and its 
    members is to be attained through fraternity or, as it is also called, 
    universal solidarity, all minds must be united in the knowledge of 
    Truth, all wills united in morality, and all hearts in the love of God 
    and His Son Jesus Christ. But this union is attainable only by Catholic 
    charity, and that is why Catholic charity alone can lead the people in 
    the march of progress towards the ideal civilization. (Pope
  Saint Pius X,  Notre Charge Apostolique, August 15, 1910.)
Pope Saint Pius X went on to condemn the admixture of beliefs in the quest for "justice" at home and "peace" abroad:
  Here we have, founded by Catholics, an 
    inter-denominational association that is to work for the reform of 
    civilization, an undertaking which is above all religious in character; for
      there is no true civilization without a moral civilization, and no true
      moral civilization without the true religion: it is a proven truth, a 
      historical fact. The new Sillonists cannot pretend that they 
    are merely working on “the ground of practical realities” where 
    differences of belief do not matter. Their leader is so conscious of the
    influence which the convictions of the mind have upon the result of the
    action, that he invites them, whatever religion they may belong to, “to
    provide on the ground of practical realities, the proof of the 
    excellence of their personal convictions.” And with good reason: indeed,
    all practical results reflect the nature of one’s religious 
    convictions, just as the limbs of a man down to his finger-tips, owe 
    their very shape to the principle of life that dwells in his body.
  This being said, what must be thought of the 
    promiscuity in which young Catholics will be caught up with heterodox 
    and unbelieving folk in a work of this nature? Is it not a thousand-fold
    more dangerous for them than a neutral association? What are we to 
    think of this appeal to all the heterodox, and to all the unbelievers, 
    to prove the excellence of their convictions in the social sphere in a 
    sort of apologetic contest? Has not this contest lasted for nineteen
      centuries in conditions less dangerous for the faith of Catholics? And 
      was it not all to the credit of the Catholic Church? What are we to 
      think of this respect for all errors, and of this strange invitation 
      made by a Catholic to all the dissidents to strengthen their convictions
      through study so that they may have more and more abundant sources of 
      fresh forces? What are we to think of an association in which all 
    religions and even Free-Thought may express themselves openly and in 
    complete freedom? For the Sillonists who, in public lectures and 
    elsewhere, proudly proclaim their personal faith, certainly do not 
    intend to silence others nor do they intend to prevent a Protestant from
    asserting his Protestantism, and the skeptic from affirming his 
    skepticism. Finally, what are we to think of a Catholic who, on entering
    his study group, leaves his Catholicism outside the door so as not to 
    alarm his comrades who, “dreaming of disinterested social action, are 
    not inclined to make it serve the triumph of interests, coteries and 
    even convictions whatever they may be”? Such is the profession of faith 
    of the New Democratic Committee for Social Action which has taken over 
    the main objective of the previous organization and which, they say, 
    “breaking the double meaning which surround the Greater Sillon both in 
    reactionary and anti-clerical circles”, is now open to all men “who 
    respect moral and religious forces and who are convinced that no genuine
    social emancipation is possible without the leaven of generous 
    idealism.” (Pope
  Saint Pius X,  Notre Charge Apostolique, August 15, 1910.)
 
"What are we to think of this 
  respect for all errors, and of this strange invitation made by a 
  Catholic to all the dissidents to strengthen their convictions through 
  study so that they may have more and more abundant sources of fresh 
  forces?" 
Indeed. 
What are we to think of 
  Ratzinger/Benedict's and Bergoglio/Francis's respect for those who hold errors, of theirs --and 
  of the soon-to-be "canonized" Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II's--exhortation to Protestants to be faithful 
  to their "traditions"? 
What are we to think of efforts to "re-think" 
  things have been revealed to us by God and taught definitively by popes 
  and dogmatic councils? 
Such a contempt for the authentic patrimony of 
  the Catholic Church is a sign of infidelity to Our Lord and of a 
  manifest rejection of the teaching authority of the popes and the 
  councils that preceded the death of Pope Pius XII on October 9, 1958. 
Leaving aside other elements--such as Benedict and Bergoglio's absolutely shared belief that a pope is not an absolute monarch and that the Church 
  has no role to play in the Mideast crisis, thus vitiating once more Heaven's Peace Plan, Fatima-- in the German television interview conducted three
  years ago that are merely reiterations of the conciliarist mindset that
  Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI helped to bring about and continues to 
  proselytize with great evangelical fervor, I want to contrast 
  his and his successor's  acceptance of the "changed" nature of the world 
  and his rejection of the necessity of Catholicizing men and their 
  nations with the great Apostle of the Northland, Saint Hyacinth, O.P., 
  who gave his life so that men and their nations would indeed be 
  Catholic.
The Apostle of the Northland 
Born in 1185 in Silesia, which was then in Poland, 
  Hyacinth was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Cracow and accompanied
  his Uncle Ivo, the Bishop of Cracow, to Rome with his brother Ceslaus, 
  also a priest of the Diocese of Cracow. After having heard that Father 
  Dominic, the founder of the Order of Friars Preachers, had raised 
  Stephen Cardinal Orsini's nephew from the dead. Bishop Ivo told his two 
  nephews, both of whom would be raised to the altars of the Catholic 
  Church, that they should try to see this Father Dominic before they left
  Rome to return to Poland.  As is recounted in the late Mary Fabyan 
  Windeatt's Saint Hyacinth of Poland:
 
  A soft glow stole into Hyacinth's eyes. "Maybe we 
    should also pray for another favor," he suggested. "What do you think, 
    Uncle Ivo? Could you use some of Father Dominic's friars in Cracow? 
  Such was Father Hyacinth Konski's zeal for souls 
    that he desired to help his brother Poles to have the best priests 
    possible to teach them the Faith from which they had, for the most part,
    fallen away over the course of time. Father Dominic de Guzman had no 
    priests to send to Poland. He did, however, suggest that Hyacinth and 
    Ceslaus, ordained priests, join his own novitiate and then return to 
    their homeland to preach to their own people. Bishop Ivo Odrowatz was a 
    little amazed at the suggestion:
  Now Ivo Odrowatz, who had come to Rome for one 
    purpose only: to be confirmed in his new post as Bishop of Cracow, was 
    somewhat stunned at the sudden turn of events. Could it be that these 
    nephews whom he had trained and encouraged for years in God's service 
    were being rather too hasty in their decision to follow the Spanish 
    friar?
  "Ceslaus has degrees in theology and law from the 
    University of Bologna," he said slowly. "He's been a priest at the 
    Cathedral in Cracow for about five years. . ."
  "And this younger brother? What of him?"
  The bishop gazed fondly at Hyacinth. "He, too, has a
    good education, Father Dominic. First at the University of Prague, then
    at Bologna. Like Ceslaus, he is now a canon of the Cathedral in Cracow.
    But do you really think. . .?"
  Dominic smiled--understandingly, affectionately. 
    "Do I really think that men who are already priests can take to living 
    as simple friars without a struggle? Oh, Your Lordship, have no fear! 
    You have asked for workers, for apostles in the North. Soon you will 
    have them. And not only in Hyacinth and Ceslaus. There are others in 
    your retinue whom God intends for His service."
  The Bishop stared, "Others, Father Dominic?" 
  "Yes, I see one now--standing by the window. And a 
    second at the door. Come here, my sons. Tell me if it is not true that 
    God has suddenly touched your heats with His grace--that now you are 
    both convinced you must give yourselves to Him completely.
  All eyes turned to where Dominic pointed, and the 
    Bishop gasped. Advancing toward the Spanish friar were two of his lay 
    attendants--Herman, who hailed from Germany, and a young Czech named 
    Henry. They were good souls, honest and hard-working, but never had the 
    Bishop suspected that they might be interested in the religious life. 
    Indeed, until this very moment they had seemed quite content to spend 
    their days as servants in the episcopal household.
  Dominic was smiling. "Well, Herman? Well, Henry? What do you ask?"
  With one accord the two fell upon their knees. Yes, they also wanted to be clothed in the habit of the Friars Preachers."
  Miss Windeatt went on to describe Bishop Ivo Odrowatz's continued amazement at all of this:
  "Bishop Ivo watched the little scene with a 
    fast-beating heart. What an amazing day this was! He had come to beg for
    missionaries from Father Dominic de Guzman. Instead, the holy man had 
    claimed both nephews and servants for his preaching Order. Yet even as 
    he thought on this, reassuring words echoed in Ivo's ears:
  "Why not give me some of these young men who have 
    accompanied you here to Rome? In just a little while I would return them
    to you as true apostles."
  Apostles! Apostles for Poland. God willing, the 
    holy friar was right, thought the Bishop. Ceslaus and Hyacinth, even 
    Herman and Henry, would do great things in the cause of Christ!"
Apostles, indeed! The 
  novitiate having been completed, the friars set out for their 750 mile 
  journey to Cracow, unaware that God would separate them on different 
  paths to evangelize different peoples as they walked. Father Dominic 
  accompanied them part of the way, resisting the temptation to proceed 
  onto Poland himself, aware that he was going to die a little over a year
  from then, on August 6, 1221. Father Dominic did get Father Hyacinth to
  relate the history of Poland to him while they were walking, learning 
  that the Poles fought a lot and were in need of being taught the Faith 
  well. 
 
  "There have been feuds and battles without number 
    in such cases," said Hyacinth sadly. "Brother kills brother and seizes 
    his lands, so that he may be more powerful. Soon he meets a man who has 
    done just the same thing. They fight each other, taxing the people to 
    provide for their armies. Then thousands upon thousands of young men are
    killed. Many sins are committed, homes are destroyed, and there is no 
    time to think about God, to provide training and education for the poor.
    Oh, my friends! Don't you see why apostles must hurry to the North? The
    nobles there must be taught to see Christ in other human beings! The 
    peasants, fighting and dying in a foolish cause, must be taught the 
    same!
  Dominic's eyes shone. What an immense field for 
    good lay in northern Europe! And how fine if he could go there with 
    these zealous young disciples! It would be as fruitful a trip as the one
    he had longed to make to Asia in his early manhood. But even as he 
    thought on this, a shadow crossed his face. Sixteen years ago, by 
    express command of Pope Innocent the Third, Asia, had been denied him as
    a missionary field. He had been forced to set aside the glorious 
    thought of dying as a martyr at the hands of the barbarian Tartars 
    living there and to concentrated instead on rooting out the Albigensian 
    heresy in southern France. Now, it would seem that, with the same spirit
    of abandonment to God's Will, he must set aside the thought of going to
    Poland. What strength he had should be spent in training others to be 
    missionaries, not wasted in foolish day-dreams.
  "By my spirit will go forth with Hyacinth and his 
    friends," he thought. "God will grant this one favor at least. And He 
    will also grant another. Someday Poland will be one of the truly 
    Christian countries of the whole world. Many saints and martyrs will 
    rise up there to love and bless the Holy Name of God. I know it!"
The trip to Poland did not go as quick as Father 
  Hyacinth, O.P., thought it would. The Archbishop of Salzburg, Austria, 
  inveighed his company of friars preachers to stay on in his archdiocese,
  working first in the mining city of Friesach, where over fifty men had 
  heard of the Dominicans and wanted to join the order. Putting aside his 
  own plans to return home hastily, Saint Hyacinth answered God's call and
  relented to the desire of the Archbishop of Salzburg to stay there for a
  while.
  "Maybe you'll tell me how long I ought to stay here
    in Friesach? asked the young superior suddenly. "Also, what is to be 
    done with the fifty novices?"
  The Archbishop looked out of the window. A huge 
    crowd had gathered in the public square. and every face was turned in 
    the direction of the church steps. Apparently one of Hyacinth's little 
    band was preaching, and the prelate noted thankfully that the audience 
    was hanging on every word. Ah, how good God was, he reflected, to have 
    sent such true apostles to Austria--men who were literally remaking the 
    city of Friesach! For these daily sermons in the public square were only
    part of the work undertaken by the friars since their arrival six weeks
    ago. Always, after the sermons, there were long lines of men and women 
    wanting to go to Confession. Throughout the city the secular clergy were
    busier than they had ever been before. And because of the increased 
    reception of the Sacraments, vice had almost disappeared in Friesach. 
    There was much more happiness in family and in individual life.
   
It is only Catholicism, not 
  the Modernist orientation of conciliarism, that transforms the lives of 
  men and thus that of their countries. The Deposit of Faith. The 
  Sacraments. Public devotion given to the Mother of God, including 
  exhortations to pray her Most Holy Rosary. There is no other path to 
  personal or social reform other than Catholicism. Do you think that 
  Joseph Ratzinger believes this? His words have been constant throughout 
  his priestly life in denying that this is the case.
Before leaving Father Herman in charge as the 
  superior of the Dominicans in Friesach, Father Hyacinth prepared himself
  in prayer:
  As Herman took the chair his superior indicated, 
    his heart rejoiced. It has been quite a while since there had been a 
    chance to talk privately with Father Hyacinth. The recent days had been 
    such busy ones for him, what with the many sermons to the public square,
    the opening of the new monastery, the reception and training of fifty 
    novices. And at night things were not much different, for then Hyacinth 
    gave himself to long and loving prayer before the Blessed Sacrament, 
    realizing full well that a man never accomplishes anything of himself, 
    not even the smallest task. All grace and strength come from God, and 
    come in truly greater abundance if they are asked for frequently and 
    humbly upon one's knees.
  "Now, you're having a really wise thought, Brother 
    Herman," said Hyacinth as he seated himself at the other side of the 
    table. "Prayer is certainly the most wonderful medicine in the world. 
    And none of us ever grows strong enough to do without it."
  As had happened so many times, Herman did not even notice this bit of mind-reading. He leaned forward with childlike eagerness.
  "Prayer is wonderful, Father. Do you know that last
    week I made up a little one of my own and dedicated it to the Blessed 
    Mother? Ever since then it has brought me one great comfort."
  "Really? And what is this prayer, Brother?"
  "Sweetest Jesus, grant that I may praise with my 
    mouth, cherish with my heart and honor by my actions Thy most loving 
    Mother and mine."
  For a moment Hyacinth was
    silent, gazing long and tenderly at the young religious. And as he 
    gazed, he was struck with sudden joy. Herman was a saint! For months he 
    had prayed faithfully to the Blessed Mother for help with his work. 
    Since he was convinced that he was stupid, a good-for-nothing when it 
    came to study and preaching, his prayers had been rooted in unusual 
    humility. Herman had recognized his own nothingness, was even content to
    remain stupid if this were God's Will. Yet he he had remembered that 
    Father Dominic had clothed him with the habit of a Friar Preacher for 
    some special reason, that he must do all in his power to be true to the 
    wonderful gift of his vocation. Prayer was required of him, of 
    course--humble and persevering--but work was required, too, and early in
    his religious life Herman had discovered the worth of these twin tools 
    with which each man in the world must build his ladder to Heaven. He had
    discovered them and called upon the Blessed Mother for assistance in 
    their use. And of course she had answered the prayer of a trusting 
    child. Every day. slowly, surely, Herman was progressing in both the 
    spiritual and the intellectual life.
   
It was soon thereafter that 
  Father Hyacinth had to part with his own beloved brother, Father 
  Ceslaus. The Bishop of Prague had heard what wonderful things the 
  Dominican friars were doing in Austria. Father Hyacinth knew that he had
  to part with his own brother for the sake souls
 
  Quietly he placed his hands on Ceslaus' head and 
    prayed that comforting words would come to him, wonderful for still 
    another time why Father Dominic had made him, the younger brother, 
    superior of the group that had set out from Rome more than five months 
    ago. Yet, sensing his weakness, he sensed a certain strength, too.
  "Ceslaus," he whispered suddenly, "do you remember how we used to wonder at Father Dominic's great success as a preacher?"
  Ceslaus smiled. "Yes. But we soon discovered the 
    reason. He paid the price for other people's sins. the fruitful sermons 
    sprang from sacrifices--small and large."
  "I know. And somehow it seems that it ought to be 
    the same with us. If we really want to do great things for souls, 
    shouldn't we disregard our own feelings? Shouldn't we be willing to do 
    anything God asks, even if it means. . ."
  "Even if it means never seeing each other again?"
  Hyacinth looked long and earnestly into his brother's eyes. Ah, so Ceslaus did understand!
  "That would be true suffering, wouldn't it?" he asked presently, "with power to purchase many souls from sin?"
  Ceslaus did not answer right away. "To be separated
    from this younger brother would be much more than suffering in the 
    ordinary sense. It would be akin to a slow and excruciating death. Yet 
    of course Hyacinth was right. Only by dying to earthly joys are men made
    ready for the joys of Heaven. Therefore. . .
  "If we ask God to help us, we can make any sacrifice," he said finally. "So I will go to Prague, Hyacinth--or 
    anywhere else you wish to send me--and go with a happy heart. And here 
    and now perhaps I had better say good-bye. May Our Lord bless you 
    always--and prosper your work, wherever it may be."
  Scarcely knowing whence came the idea, Hyacinth 
    suddenly felt convinced that countries other than Poland would profit 
    from the labors of Ceslaus and himself. Between then, and with God's 
    help, they would spread the True Faith over much of Europe. "You will go
    to Bohemia, Silesia and Germany," he said, not realizing that his voice
    had taken on strange and prophetic tones. "I will go to Poland, 
    Ruthenia, Lithuania and Prussia. And every day we will meet in prayer at
    the altar, as Father Dominic taught us."
After leaving Brother Henry in charge of a new 
  monastery in Olmutz, Father Hyacinth was able to return to his beloved 
  Poland, meeting two children just outside of Cracow who caught his 
  attention:
 
  "Little friends, I'm Father Hyacinth," he told 
    them, smiling. "My clothes are those of a Friar Preacher, and I've come 
    from Rome to Cracow with important news for souls. Now, who are you?"
  "My name is Stanislaus," announced the boy promptly. "I'm ten years old, and I live a mile farther down this road."
  "And I'm his sister Elizabeth," said the girl." I'm eight years old. Every day we gather wood for our parents."
  Hyacinth nodded approvingly. Both Stanislaus and 
    Elizabeth had the fair hair and blue eyes that were so common in Poland.
    Their plain homespun garb and the confident manner in which they 
    carried the burdens of firewood showed that they were of the peasant 
    class--sturdy and accustomed to hard work out-of-doors. But suddenly the
    friar's glance narrowed. Could it be that something was wrong? That the
    two children. . .
  It surprised the youngsters when their new friend 
    suddenly suggested that he carry the bundles of wood. Apparently he 
    wanted to hear more about both brother and sister and believed that 
    talking would be easier for the children if they did not have such 
    awkward loads upon their shoulders.
  "I do like your names," he told them, smiling. "Stanislaus and Elizabeth. Of course you received them in Baptism?"
  A sudden pain shot through Hyacinth's heart. 
    So--his fears had not been groundless! These children, like hundreds of 
    thousands in northern Europe, had never been baptized. Neither probably,
    had their parents or grandparents. Indeed, young Stanislaus probably 
    knew nothing of the man who had made this name the holiest in Poland's 
    history--Bishop Stanislaus of Cracow--in 1079 the country's first martyr
    at the wicked hands of King Boleslaus the Second. As for the little 
    girl--had anyone ever told her of the Blessed Virgin or of her cousin 
    Elizabeth.
  So it was that presently Hyacinth was giving the 
    peasant children their first lesson in Catechism. They listened 
    attentively, for never before had they heard anyone speak of Heaven, 
    that wonderful place where men and women live in eternal glory after 
    having served God faithfully upon earth. 
  "You mean that we can go to Heaven, too, Father 
    Hyacinth?" asked Elizabeth, her eyes shining. "We can go there, even if 
    we're poor?"
  The friar smiled. "Yes, child. God wishes all the 
    souls He has made to be happy with Him forever in Heaven. But they must 
    love and serve Him in the way He has told us."
  The little girl was on the point of asking still 
    more questions when suddenly her brother seized her arm. "What luck, 
    Elizabeth! See the big procession? The Duke must be coming out from the 
    city!"
  Immediately the child forgot her new-found interest
    in the next-world. Shading her eyes, she stood tip-toe and gazed 
    spellbound into the distance. For the road they had been traveling had 
    now reached its highest point. Cracow lay before them, and the blue 
    waters of the Vistula, while winding out from the city's south gate were
    more than fifty carriages decked with gay banners and flags!
  Elizabeth tugged eagerly at Hyacinth's cloak. 
    "Look, Father! the gold and scarlet carriage with the twelve white 
    horses belongs to Duke Leszek. Isn't it beautiful?"
  Hyacinth smiled. "Yes, child. And we have a wonderful view from here."
  Suddenly, Stanislaus let out an excited squeal. 
    "Two soldiers are riding ahead, Father, and waving at us! Do you suppose
    that means we should get off the road?"
  The friar shifted the two bundles of firewood on 
    his shoulders. His keen eyes had just identified the coat of arms of 
    Bishop Ivo flying from one of the carriages. With a little laugh he 
    looked down at the boy beside him.
  "No, I don't think we need to get off the road, Stanislaus."
  "But the Duke must be coming to greet some important visitor! A prince, maybe! Or a king!"
  Again Hyacinth laughed. "No, little friend. I believe this visitor is as poor as any beggar in Cracow."
  A few minutes later the brilliant procession had 
    halted at a short distance down the road and dozens of noblemen and 
    clerics were emerging from the carriages. What was the children's 
    astonishment when they observed that the attention of the entire company
    was upon the man who was laden with their own bundles of firewood! 
    Then, before their eyes, Leszek the White, Duke of Cracow, approached 
    Hyacinth and prostrated himself in the dust. And thus he lay until the 
    friar had raised him to his feet.
  "Your Grace, I am only a human being," Hyacinth protested. "I deserve no such reception as this."
  Leszek's face as pale as he pointed a trembling hand toward the sky. "But surely you saw her, Father?"
  "Saw whom, Your Grace?"
  "Why, the Blessed Virgin! A few minutes ago it was 
    as if the heavens had opened. I saw Our Lady standing in the clouds, and
    she was giving you her blessing. It was before her loveliness that I 
    threw myself in the dust."
  At these words a murmur of astonishment ran through
    the crowd and all eyes looked upwards. But soon it was evident that it 
    had been seen by Leszek only. Apparently God wished that the Duke of 
    Cracow should appreciate Hyacinth's entrance into the city and do all 
    that he could to help the Friar Preacher in his missionary labors among 
    the Poles.
Yes, my friends, the Queen of Heaven and of earth, 
  the Queen of All Saints, smiles on the work of priests to convert souls 
  to the Catholic Church. She smiled on Saint Hyacinth that day in Cracow.
  She smiled on Juan Diego on Tepeyac three hundred years later. She 
  smiled on Bernadette at Lourdes six hundred years later. She smiled on 
  the seers of Fatima seven hundred years later. She smiles on the work of
  praying and making sacrifices for the conversion of souls, especially 
  through the Most Holy Rosary that she gave into the hands of Saint 
  Dominic de Guzman, not on the smug, prideful assurance that all men are 
  absolutely secure in their eternal destiny even though they live their 
  entire lives and die outside of the bosom of the Catholic Church. Our 
  Lady does not smile on the ecumenism of conciliarism. She smiles on the 
  work of men to convert souls to the Catholic Church, not on those who 
  leave souls in their false religions to the point of their deaths.
Father Maximilian Kolbe explained that false ecumenism was the enemy of the Immaculata:
 
  "Only until all 
    schismatics and Protestants profess the Catholic Creed with conviction, 
    when all Jews voluntarily ask for Holy Baptism – only then will the 
    Immaculata have reached its goals.”
  
    “In other words” Saint Maximilian insisted, “there
      is no greater enemy of the Immaculata and her Knighthood than today’s 
      ecumenism, which every Knight must not only fight against, but also 
      neutralize through diametrically opposed action and ultimately destroy. 
      We must realize the goal of the Militia Immaculata as quickly as 
      possible: that is, to conquer the whole world, and every individual soul
      which exists today or will exist until the end of the world, for the 
      Immaculata, and through her for the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus.” (Father Karl Stehlin, Immaculata, Our Ideal, Kansas City, Missouri, Angelus Press, 2007, p. 37.) 
Remember what  Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI said in Cologne, Germany, on August 19, 2005:
 
  We all know there are numerous models of unity and 
    you know that the Catholic Church also has as her goal the full visible 
    unity of the disciples of Christ, as defined by the Second Vatican 
    Ecumenical Council in its various Documents (cf. Lumen Gentium, nn. 8, 13; Unitatis Redintegratio,
    nn. 2, 4, etc.). This unity, we are convinced, indeed subsists in the 
    Catholic Church, without the possibility of ever being lost (cf. Unitatis Redintegratio, n. 4); the Church in fact has not totally disappeared from the world.
  On the other 
    hand, this unity does not mean what could be called ecumenism of the 
    return:  that is, to deny and to reject one's own faith history. 
    Absolutely not!
  
  It does not mean uniformity 
    in all expressions of theology and spirituality, in liturgical forms and
    in discipline. Unity in multiplicity, and multiplicity in unity:  in my Homily for the Solemnity of Sts Peter and Paul on 29 June last,
    I insisted that full unity and true catholicity in the original sense 
    of the word go together. As a necessary condition for the achievement of
    this coexistence, the commitment to unity must be constantly purified 
    and renewed; it must constantly grow and mature. (Benedict XVI, Ecumenical meeting at the Archbishopric of Cologne English, August 19, 2005.)
Go tell that to Saint Hyacinth! 
Father Hyacinth established Holy Trinity Monastery in
  Cracow, working to teach the people, being blessed with great success. 
  Not content, however, to stay in Cracow, he went on in due course to try
  to establish the Faith in the pagan land known as Prussia. While en 
  route there, Our Lady helped him walked across the Vistula River, near 
  Vishogrod, when it was raging. Miss Windeatt picks up the scene:
 
  Naturally the people of Vishogrod were beside 
    themselves. Who were these strangers? Surely the God they worshiped must
    be the True God!
  "I'm going to get my boat and go after them!" cried a fisherman suddenly. "Who wants to come along?"
  Instantly, there was a mad scramble to fill this 
    and other boats, and soon the now peaceful Vistula presented a busy 
    scene. Almost half the population of Vishogrod was on its way across the
    river--all eyes fixed upon the four religious who continued to defy the
    laws of nature in so spectacular a fashion.
  As might be expected, the miraculous crossing was 
    witnessed by many from the opposite bank. When Hyacinth and his friars 
    finally stepped ashore here, it was to be greeted by an anger and 
    awestruck throng, a few of whom had received the Christian Faith in 
    years past but since had drifted away. Now they fell upon their knees to
    make a general Confession of their sins. Oh, how true that they had 
    broken all the Commandments--even to the point of committing murder and 
    worshiping false gods!
  "Forgive us, Father! they begged earnestly. "Give us your blessing, and we'll try not to sin anymore!"
Father Hyacinth could not grant the crowd's request 
  to establish a monastery there at that time. He had to press on with his
  travels to meet with the Duke of Pomerania, Duke Swientopelk. 
  Establishing a monastery in Pomerania would place his preaching friars 
  reasonably near Prussia itself. The Duke was very accommodating, but 
  surprised to learn that Saint Hyacinth wanted to establish his monastery
  in Gedan, known today as Gdansk (known also as Danzig in the days when 
  the Germans controlled this port city along the Baltic Sea). 
 
  Hyacinth smiled as he read the Duke's thoughts, but
    he did not change his mind. Somehow he had a feeling that Gedan was one
    of the most valuable sections of Pomerania. Although it was isolated 
    now, and a wilderness, there would come a day when the waters of the 
    Baltic would complete a remarkable change. Even now tons of sand were 
    being deposited by the tide in such a manner that gradually the channel 
    between Gedan and the mainland was becoming very shallow. As a result, 
    in a few years there would no longer be an island. One one side nature 
    would have joined Gedan to the mainland, thus creating an excellent 
    harbor.
  "When this happens, Gedan will become a great 
    center of commerce," Hyacinth told himself. "Boats will come here from 
    all over the world. Some will continue to call the place Gedan, others 
    Sdansk, but most people will know it by the name of Danzig. God willing,
    our friars will have some part in making Danzig a truly Christian 
    city."
Saint Hyacinth stayed in Gedan for a while to 
  establish his monastery, informing Duke Swientopelk that he was going to
  go to Russia to convert the people steeped in the errors of Orthodoxy, 
  that harbinger of Protestantism that has such a hold on the mind of the 
  comciliar "popes."  In other words, Saint Hyacinth was undertaking 
  the sort of proselytism in Russia that is absolutely forbidden by the 
  conciliar church today. Miss Windeatt explains Saint Hyacinth's 
  concerns:
 
  "Today every city [in Russia] has its churches and monasteries," Hyacinth explained as they set out on their journey. "Yet there is work for us because for generations the Russian bishops and priests have been living in error. Like so many others in the East, particularly in Turkey and Greece, 
    they accept only part of what the Church teaches. And since the clergy 
    are in error, so, naturally, are the people. They have been led astray 
    so completely that they no longer understand what is meant by Truth."
Not exactly in accord with the conciliarism, huh? Saint Hyacinth was in perfect accord with Catholicism.
The narrative continues:
  "I know about one of the errors in Russia," said 
    Florian. "The priests and people don't recognize the Pope as Vicar of 
    Christ on earth. Isn't that so, Father?"
  Hyacinth nodded. "That is one of the errors. But 
    there are several others. For instance, the Russian Christians don't 
    believe that in Purgatory souls are cleansed from the stain of sin or 
    that the bread and wine are changed into the Body and Blood of Christ at
    the very instant the priest pronounces the words of Consecration. They 
    say, too, that the Holy Ghost proceeds from God the Father alone and not
    also from the Son."
 
Please believe that Joseph "Cardinal" Ratzinger, who presided over the Joint  Declaration on Justification in 1999 that, in essence, contradicted the Council of Trent, is willing
  to forgo Purgatory and the Filioque in order to effect a false union 
  with the Orthodox. Not so Saint Hyacinth. 
Saint Hyacinth informed his companions that he was 
  taking them to Kiev, not to Moscow or Smolensk. His reception by 
  Vladimir Burikovitch, the Grand Prince of Kiev, was not pleasant at 
  first, that is, until Saint Hyacinth gave sight to the prince's 
  daughter, who had been blind from birth:
 
  "Receive what you most desire, child," he whispered, "in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."
  In just a few minutes the entire palace was in an 
    uproar. Servants, guards--even the royal family itself--were running 
    hither and yon, the same exciting words on every tongue. Little Princess
    Anna could see!
  "I'm sure the new priest did it!" cried the child 
    joyfully, pointing to Father Hyacinth. "I heard him praying over me, and
    now thins aren't dark anymore."
  Unashamed of the tears coursing down his cheeks, 
    Vladimir pressed his little daughter to his heart. What joy! What 
    marvelous and unexpected joy! But even as the happy tears flowed, the 
    mind of the Grand Prince was troubled. How could he ever repay the 
    Polish friar who had made all the happiness possible? Why, only a short 
    while ago he had ordered him out of the palace, even out of Kiev!
  "Father, forgive me!" he murmured humbly. "What reward will you have for the miracle?"
  Hyacinth shook his head. "Reward? Why should I have
    a reward, Your Majesty? or gratitude? Don't you know that God worked 
    this wonder so that you would be brought closer to Him? 
  Vladimir hesitated."Yes, Father. But just the same, there must be something you would like. Can't you tell me what it is?"
  Once again Hyacinth shook his head. He would claim 
    no reward. As he continued to smile kindly upon the Russian monarch, the
    latter's pride suddenly crumbled. Could it be that his foreigner 
    professed the True Faith, and not the clergy of Kiev? That the "western 
    Catholics" were in the right, instead of those who paid homage to the 
    Patriarch of Constantinople?
After a battle within himself, Vladimir professed the
  Catholic Faith and gave permission for Father Hyacinth to establish a 
  monastery in Kiev. Knowing that there would be fierce opposition from 
  some Orthodox priests (and from the conciliar Vatican today if this had 
  taken place in our own lifetimes), Hyacinth, who was given to see the 
  future, including the fact that he would die at the age of seventy-two, 
  in 1257, reassured his companions about how things would turn out, 
  explaining that they should not worry about the wounded pride of the 
  heretical priests steeped in the many errors of Orthodoxy and that some 
  of them would embrace the true Faith, Catholicism: 
 
  Hyacinth smiled. "Possibly, my son. And yet that is
    just what is going to happen. Within two years we'll clothe several 
    young men in the habit of our Order. More than that. A number of Russian
    priests will also be converted and come to live in this new monastery.
  Godinus and Florian looked wide-eyed at each other.
    This was almost too much to believe--that some of Kiev's heretical 
    priests should acknowledge their error, lay aside important positions, 
    then ask for the lowest place in a monastery of "western" friars!
  "It will happen thus within two years," repeated 
    Hyacinth firmly. "However, we won't think about it now. We won't even 
    try to do very much about converting the 'eastern Catholics' or their 
    leaders. Rather, we shall devote ourselves to another group of people. 
    Who are they, Brother Florian?"
  "The pagans," replied the latter quickly. "There are many of them in the city."
Saint Hyacinth, having effected the conversion of 
  Grand Prince Vladimir, knew that Our Lady would spread the True Faith as
  he concentrated on the pagans. Unlike the conciliarists, who forbid any
  efforts to convert the Orthodox, Saint Hyacinth knew that the Orthodox 
  were in error and had started, much like Saint Patrick with the Irish 
  chieftains, with the leader and knew that the Blessed Mother would do 
  the rest of the work. 
Part of his work in dealing with the pagans involved 
  destroying their false worship. He did not engage in "inter-cultural" 
  dialogue. He did not believe in "peaceful coexistence" with demon 
  worship. He was an apostle whose immortal soul was on fire for the 
  conversion of souls to the True Faith, sparing no effort to take people 
  out of their false worship.
Here is a scene that took place on island in the Dnieper River  outside of Kiev:
 
  For a moment all was silence as Hyacinth fixed his 
    eyes in careful scrutiny upon the island. Then suddenly his hands 
    clenched. Drawn up at one side of the island were several small boats. 
    And toward the center, from amidst the thick trees, rose a slender 
    column of smoke!
  "The pagans!" he whispered. "They're offering sacrifice!"
  Yes, the hour of sunrise was a favorite time for 
    idol worship and gratefully Hyacinth realized that his plans were 
    working out well More than a hundred men and women must be on the 
    island, kneeling in a secret grove before the ugly statue they believed 
    to be a god. Already there must have been prayers and hymns, then the 
    burning of a lamb or calf before the idol. Soon the service would be 
    over and the pagans would stream down to their boats to return to their 
    homes in Kiev.
  "I've no time to lose," he said firmly. "Kneel 
    down, Brother Martin, and pray that I do something really worthwhile to 
    help these poor people!"
  Before the young religious could realize what was 
    happening, Hyacinth had turned and started down the grassy slope to the 
    river's edge. His black cloak floated before him like a sail, and for a 
    moment Martin knelt as one in a dream--forgetful of the command to pray.
    With what speed his beloved superior moved! Why, he was all but flying 
    down the hill! Then the young friar grew really weak, for suddenly he 
    understood that he was witnessing a genuine wonder. By now Father 
    Hyacinth had reached the Dnieper and was starting to cross over to the 
    island. But not in a boat. Ah, no! Father Hyacinth was walking on the river as thought it were dry land! 
  "Mother of God! cried Martin. "I heard that he did 
    such a thing at Vishogrod . . . on the Vistula! But here? Before me? Oh,
    no! It's too much! 
  Presently Hyacinth landed safely on the island, 
    then disappeared into the thick woods. And, though Martin strained his 
    eyes for several minutes, he could see him no longer. Nor was any sound 
    to be heard save the harsh cries of water birds as they circled over the
    river in search of food.
  As he looked and listened in an agony of suspense, 
    the young religious tried to clasp his trembling hands in prayer. Oh, 
    what was going to happen? Would Father Hyacinth really seek out the 
    pagans? Would he put a stop to their heathen sacrifice?
It should be noted at this juncture, my friends, that
  heathen sacrifice is offered all the time in the name of the 
  "inculturation of the Gospel," as happened in July of 2006 in Toronto, 
  Canada, when Hindu "worship" was offered in the context of what 
  purported to be an offering of the Protestant and Masonic Novus Ordo worship
  service. 
Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II once praised a voodoo witch doctor 
  in Benin, Africa, in 1993 for the "contributions" he made to his people.  
Pagan blessings of "the four winds" are offered regularly in many 
  Catholic churches, as has been done at Mission San Juan Capistrano in 
  California. 
Oh no, my friends, conciliarism worships at the devil's 
  altars, considering the work of Saint Hyacinth to be something to 
  apologize for, not imitate. 
Does anyone want to contend that Saint 
  Hyacinth would have called Mount Hiei in Japan "sacred" for its being 
  the site of the first outpost of the Tendei sect of the false, 
  diabolical religion known as Buddhism? 
Does anyone want to contend that 
  Saint Hyacinth would have done what Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI did on
  April 17, 2008, when latter received with his own priestly hands the 
  symbols of five false religions? 
Does anyone want to contend that Saint 
  Hyacinth would have said anything other than the simple truth that God 
  hates each false religion and that He wants each of them and their 
  symbols eradicated from the face of this earth? 
Ah, back to the story:
 
  "It can mean death," he [Martin] thought. "Even I know that the Russian pagans are little more than crude barbarians."
  Suddenly there was a clamor in the distance, muted 
    at first, then growing louder, and with a sinking heart, the young man 
    realized that the pagans were aroused. They were pouring out of the 
    woods with screams and shouts. But soon he could see that they were not 
    attacking Father Hyacinth. They were not even making for their boats. 
    Rather, they were throwing themselves on their knees in a very frenzy of
    terror. And why? Because a black-and-white-clad friar was striding out 
    of the woods and driving before him a horrible creature--half man, half 
    beat---with flames shooting from its mouth and eyes!
  Martin's blood ran cold as he looked at the 
    terrible sight. Could it be that this was the Devil? that Father 
    Hyacinth's prayers had forced him to leave the idol and appear before 
    the pagans in one of his hellish shapes?
  "Oh, if one some of the Russian priests could be 
    here!" whispered the young friar, his teeth clattering. "Maybe this 
    would teach them not to speak ill of a true servant of God!"
  Martin was wrong. When word of the miracle was 
    noised about in Kiev, the jealousy of the heretical priests reached 
    alarming proportions. So Father Hyacinth had gone to the island and 
    found the pagans worshiping before an old oak tree? With one blow he had
    sent the great tree crumbling into dust? As the Evil One emerged from 
    the tree, he had fought with him hand to hand, then thrown him into the 
    Dnieper?
The jealousy of the Russian Orthodox priests forced 
  Grand Prince Vladimir's hand. While the Grand Prince remained a Catholic
  and two of Father Hyacinth's friars could stay on at the monastery in 
  Kiev, he, Father Hyacinth, had to leave. His work, though, for souls had
  been established. That anyone in the Ukraine today is Catholic is the 
  result of the seeds planted by Father Hyacinth, O.P.
Saint Hyacinth continued working for souls throughout
  his life. 
We first read Miss Windeatt's book out loud at mealtimes for 
  our daughter to hear when she was four years old in 2006. The full book, which was reprinted by TAN Books 
  and Publishers in 1993, is certainly a great antidote to the 
  indifferentist spirit of conciliarism. Saint Hyacinth wanted to win men 
  and their nations for Christ the King and for his true Church, the 
  Catholic Church. 
Although the passage below was included in In Full Communion with the Golden Calf several years ago now, the vision of Heaven that Saint Stanislaus had 
  shortly before he died reminds us of the reward that awaits those who 
  are zealous to bring souls into the true Church:
 
  But on the feast of Saint Dominic all realized that
    Hyacinth's days were numbered. Apart from the fact that he was worn out
    with thirty-seven years of missionary labors, he no loner cared to 
    live. Indeed, his one great desire was to die as quickly as possible.
  "Any why? Because our good Father has had a glimpse
    of Heaven!" the Prior told the community in awed tones. "He's seen a 
    little of the reward awaiting those who do God's Will, and now even the 
    finest things in life are no more than dust and ashes."
  "Tell us about the wonderful vision, Father," urged the Novice Master. "It will do us all good."
  So the Prior began. He explained how one day 
    recently Father Hyacinth, as he was concluding the Holy Sacrifice, had 
    found himself in the center of a bright ray of light. It had streamed 
    down upon him from some mysterious source above the altar, and as he 
    looked up, he had been amazed to find that hundreds of angels and saints
    were also enfolded in the strange glow. 
  Suddenly there was an even greater radiance, and 
    Heaven itself opened before him. Then the saints and angels divided and 
    ranged themselves in two lines, facing one another. At the end of the 
    glittering passageway was a golden throne.
  "Our Lady was seated on the throne," said the Prior
    reverently, "and Our Lord stood beside her. The air was filled with the
    most beautiful music as the saints and angels joined in praise of 
    Mother and Son. Then suddenly the perfect harmony died away. All was 
    silence, and Our Lord placed a splendid crown upon His Mother's head. It
    seemed to be made of flowers and stars."
  The community listened in breathless amazement as 
    the Prior described the scene which followed. With a smile the Blessed 
    Virgin had taken the glittering crown from her own head and presented it
    to Hyacinth. 
  "This is for you," she had said, "the symbol of 
    eternal life." And as she finished speaking, the saints and angels 
    resumed their heavenly song, their faces shining with such light and 
    happiness that Hyacinth could hardly bear to look upon them. Indeed, 
    only one thought filled his mind. He wanted to finish his earthly work 
    at once, so that he might be numbered among these blessed ones for all 
    eternity.
  As the days passed the priests and lay Brothers of 
    Holy Trinity went about their duties in deep thought. Father Hyacinth's 
    vision of Heaven, as related by the Prior, had made an enormous 
    impression upon them, and now even the smallest task was seen in a new 
    light. Its faithful accomplishment was nothing more than a coin 
    wherewith to purchase everlasting joys.
  "Of course, we've always known that this was so," 
    said one young priest slowly. "The trouble is, we've never thought about
    it enough. But now--well, I'm happy to say that I can't get the idea 
    out of my mind."
  "Yes," put in another. "And that crown of flowers 
    and stars is far more than it seems. It's only a sign, and a very small 
    sign, too, of all the joys possessed by the blessed in Heaven.
  His companion nodded. "I know. Why, if we spent our
    whole lives in listing the good tidings God has provided for those who 
    serve Him faithfully, in this world, we'd have only a few poor 
    samples." 
Saint Hyacinth performed many miracles, including 
  raising the dead to life. We need to pray to him in our own day that so 
  the lords of the counterfeit church of conciliarism  who have cast aside
  Saint Hyacinth's zeal for the conversion of souls will return to the 
  maternal bosom of the spotless and immaculate Catholic Church, she who 
  can never give us defective liturgies or false or ambiguous doctrines or
  pronouncements,  before they die. Saint Hyacinth is very much with us 
  today as a member of the Church Triumphant in Heaven.
This is what he told Brother Florian just before he died on the Feast of the Assumption, August 15, 1257:
  "I am going to Heaven now, my son, yet I shall be 
    with you in spirit. Whenever you are in trouble, you are to call upon me
    and I will come to your aid. Do you understand?"
  Florian choked back a sob. "Yes, Father, I . . . I understand."
  Hyacinth sighed. "No, you do not understand. Why, you can barely speak for sorrow, because deep in your 
    heart you believe that the blessed are far away from you! But it is not 
    so, my son. Oh, no!"
  Then Hyacinth gave his message. Yes, he was about 
    to die. But this only meant that from now one he could be of greater use
    to his friends. In Heaven he would be a perfect soul, utterly pleasing 
    to god, and so his prayers would have even more power than upon earth.
  "Have faith in what I tell you," he urged. "And try
    to believe that I shall never leave Poland. I shall be with my beloved 
    country until the end."
  The Prior leaned forward anxiously. "Is our country to have many troubles in the future, Father?"
  The dying friar nodded. "Yes. But all will turn out well, Father Prior. Have no fear of that."
  
  
The same holds true for the 
  Catholic Church today. A counterfeit church claiming to be the Catholic 
  Church has deceived millions upon millions of Catholics as it makes one 
  accommodation after another with the spirit of the world and with all 
  manner of false religions. Modernism seems to have triumphed decisively 
  in the person of  Joseph Ratzinger and his contempt for the Received 
  Teaching of the Catholic Church and of her authentic Tradition. The 
  triumph is only momentary. The Modernists will be driven away. The 
  counterfeit church of conciliarism will collapse. Our Lady's Sorrowful 
  and Immaculate Heart will triumph. And our devotion to and imitation of 
  Saint Hyacinth will help to bring about the day when his example of zeal
  for souls is once again the norm and the apostasy of the present moment
  is remembered no more as we pray as many Rosaries each day as our 
  states-in-life permit. 
Saint Hyacinth of Poland, pray for us! Pray for Holy 
  Mother Church. Inspire us to use the instrument that Saint Dominic de 
  Guzman received from the hands of Our Lady herself, her Most Holy 
  Rosary, to be ready for the moment of our own Particular Judgments at 
  all times, attempting to plant seeds for the conversion of souls, 
  starting with ourselves, on a daily basis and to make reparation for our
  own sins and those of the whole world to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus
  through her own Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart. 
Vivat Christus Rex! 
  Our Lady of Fatima, pray for us.
Saint Joseph, pray for us.
Saints Peter and Paul, pray for us.
Saint John the Baptist, pray for us.
Saint Michael the Archangel, pray for us.
Saint Gabriel the Archangel, pray for us.
Saint Raphael the Archangel, pray for us.
Saints Joachim and Anne, pray for us.
Saints Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar, pray for us.
Saint Hyacinth, O.P., pray for us.
Saint Ceslaus, O.P., pray for us.
Saint Dominic de Guzman, O.P., pray for us.
Saint Stanislaus, pray for us.
Saint Hedwig, pray for us.