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                       July 29, 2006

Stained With Crime from the Very Beginning

by Thomas A. Droleskey

The United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has overturned the decision of Chief Judge Thomas F. Hogan, who sits on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, to bar attorneys of the United States Department of Justice from reviewing evidence seized from the office of United States Representative William Jefferson (D-Louisiana) on May 20-21, 2006, during an eighteen hour search.  The case has involved claims that Section 6 of Article I of the United States Constitution prevent such a search from taking place. Here is the relevant provision from Section 6 of Article I:

They shall in all Cases, except Treason, Felony and Breach of the Peace, be privileged from Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their respective Houses, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any Speech or Debate in either House, they shall not be questioned in any other Place.

Chief Judge Hogan, who ruled that the search, conducted by members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (F.B.I.), did not violate the "speech or debate" clause of Section 6 of Article I of the Constitution, determined that barring such searches could turn Capitol Hill into a "taxpayer-subsidized sanctuary for crime." With all due respect to the Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, Capitol Hill has long been a taxpayer-subsidized sanctuary for crime.

Disproportionate amounts of the income of citizens is taken by the Federal government of the United States of America to underwrite projects that are not only abjectly morally evil (contraception, Medicaid funding for baby-killing in the cases of rape, incest and instances where it is alleged that a mother's life is endangered, government subsidies for stem-cell research and grants given to universities and research institutes to promote various aspects of the sodomite agenda) but that violate the plain provisions of the United States Constitution itself, which is, for reasons outlined below, defenseless against the onslaughts of that class of criminals known as career politicians and by the positivists that serve on the Federal bench. Fueled by the systematic and planned attack on the family in state legislatures (creation of state departments of education, the mandating of state-created curricula, the promotion of divorce) and by the rise of contraceptive devices and pills in the Twentieth Century, the natural building-block of society, the family, has been rent asunder, thus creating the "need," it is alleged, for the Federal government to intervene.

Endless government programs have been created to deal with the breakdown of the family. This has placed enormous financial pressures placing pressure on those families which have remained stable in the midst of the social promotion of divorce, contraception, pornography, rock music, the passivity engendered by television and sports, promiscuity, abortion, in vitro fertilization, the acceptance of "single mothers" as a social good, and the rise of "alternative lifestyles" as eminently equal to that of marriage, among other evils, to cough up substantial parts of their own annual income to the government to "solve" problems that have their root cause in the overthrow of the Social Reign of Christ the King and the rise of the belief that man can solve his problems by the use of his own unaided intellect and by the use of billions upon billions of dollars. It is a crime that hard-working fathers, who are meant to be the principal breadwinners of their families, become slaves to the government by means of its confiscatory tax policies.

Indeed, career politicians of both major political parties seek to augment their power by increasing the size and the scope of the Federal government. Members of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives curry favor with constituents and lobbyists and contractors, both domestic and foreign, to shower them with grants and contracts, especially during election years, by means of "omnibus" appropriations bills. This is a crime. Not even the Founders of this nation would have agreed that the Constitution was to create a government to serve the career interests of a select few professional politicians and the lobbyists and contractors who exist in a symbiotic relationship with them. Alas, men who do not live and die for the honor and glory of God as He has revealed Himself exclusively through His true Church descend all too naturally into atavistic self-seeking. The Founders believed that the institutional restraints (Federalism, separation of powers and checks and balances, bicameralism) could restrain such self-seeking and promote the pagan Roman concept of "civic virtue." This was and remains a delusional belief. Men can be restrained from descending into barbarism only by knowing and loving and serving God as members of the Catholic Church, attempting to cooperate with every beat of their hearts, consecrated to the Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart of Mary and the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, with Sanctifying Grace.

Pope Leo XIII wrote about this precise point in Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus, November 1, 1900:

It must therefore be clearly admitted that, in the life of a Christian, the intellect must be entirely subject to God's authority. And if, in this submission of reason to authority, our self-love, which is so strong, is restrained and made to suffer, this only proves the necessity to a Christian of long-suffering not only in will but also in intellect. We would remind those persons of this truth who desire a kind of Christianity such as they themselves have devised, whose precepts should be very mild, much more indulgent towards human nature, and requiring little if any hardships to be borne. They do not properly under stand the meaning of faith and Christian precepts. They do not see that the Cross meets us everywhere, the model of our life, the eternal standard of all who wish to follow Christ in reality and not merely in name.

God alone is Life. All other beings partake of life, but are not life. Christ, from all eternity and by His very nature, is "the Life," just as He is the Truth, because He is God of God. From Him, as from its most sacred source, all life pervades and ever will pervade creation. Whatever is, is by Him; whatever lives, lives by Him. For by the Word "all things were made; and without Him was made nothing that was made." This is true of the natural life; but, as We have sufficiently indicated above, we have a much higher and better life, won for us by Christ's mercy, that is to say, "the life of grace," whose happy consummation is "the life of glory," to which all our thoughts and actions ought to be directed. The whole object of Christian doctrine and morality is that "we being dead to sin, should live to justice" (I Peter ii., 24)-that is, to virtue and holiness. In this consists the moral life, with the certain hope of a happy eternity. This justice, in order to be advantageous to salvation, is nourished by Christian faith. "The just man liveth by faith" (Galatians iii., II). "Without faith it is impossible to please God" (Hebrews xi., 6). Consequently Jesus Christ, the creator and preserver of faith, also preserves and nourishes our moral life. This He does chiefly by the ministry of His Church. To Her, in His wise and merciful counsel, He has entrusted certain agencies which engender the supernatural life, protect it, and revive it if it should fail. This generative and conservative power of the virtues that make for salvation is therefore lost, whenever morality is dissociated from divine faith. A system of morality based exclusively on human reason robs man of his highest dignity and lowers him from the supernatural to the merely natural life. Not but that man is able by the right use of reason to know and to obey certain principles of the natural law. But though he should know them all and keep them inviolate through life-and even this is impossible without the aid of the grace of our Redeemer-still it is vain for anyone without faith to promise himself eternal salvation. "If anyone abide not in Me, he shall be cast forth as a branch, and shall wither, and they shall gather him up and cast him into the fire, and he burneth" john xv., 6). "He that believeth not shall be condemned" (Mark xvi., 16). We have but too much evidence of the value and result of a morality divorced from divine faith. How is it that, in spite of all the zeal for the welfare of the masses, nations are in such straits and even distress, and that the evil is daily on the increase? We are told that society is quite able to help itself; that it can flourish without the assistance of Christianity, and attain its end by its own unaided efforts. Public administrators prefer a purely secular system of government. All traces of the religion of our forefathers are daily disappearing from political life and administration. What blindness! Once the idea of the authority of God as the Judge of right and wrong is forgotten, law must necessarily lose its primary authority and justice must perish: and these are the two most powerful and most necessary bonds of society. Similarly, once the hope and expectation of eternal happiness is taken away, temporal goods will be greedily sought after. Every man will strive to secure the largest share for himself. Hence arise envy, jealousy, hatred. The consequences are conspiracy, anarchy, nihilism. There is neither peace abroad nor security at home. Public life is stained with crime.

Public life is bound to be stained with crime where Our Lord does reign confessionally as the King of a nation and Our Lady is not honored publicly as its Queen. No, the confessionally Catholic State is not a guarantor that leaders or citizens will be virtuous, just as being in a state of Sanctifying Grace is not a guarantor that one will see the world clearly through the eyes of the true Faith and act accordingly in all situations. Nevertheless, just as being in a state of Sanctifying Grace is the necessary precondition for using our intellects and wills properly, so is it the case that the confessionally Catholic State is the necessary precondition for orienting the entirety of national life in light of our First Cause and Last End.

Pope Leo XIII wrote about this in A Review of His Pontificate, 1902:

Just as Christianity cannot penetrate into the soul without making it better, so it cannot enter into public life without establishing order. With the idea of a God Who governs all, Who is infinitely Wise, Good, and Just, the idea of duty seizes upon the consciences of men. It assuages sorrow, it calms hatred, it engenders heroes. If it has transformed pagan society--and that transformation was a veritable resurrection--for barabrism disappeared in proportion as Christianity extended its sway, so, after the terrible shocks which unbelief has given to the world in our days, it will be able to put that world again on the true road, and bring back to order the States and peoples of modern times. But the return of Christianity will not be efficacious and complete if it does not restore the world to a sincere love of the one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. In the Catholic Church Christianity is Incarnate. It identifies itself with that perfect, spiritual, and, in its own order, sovereign society, which is the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ and which has for its visible head the Roman Pontiff, successor of the Prince of the Apostles.  It is the continuation of the mission of the Savior, the daughter and the heiress of His Redemption. It has preached the Gospel, and has defended it at the price of Its blood, and strong in the Divine Assistance and of that immortality which has been promised it, it makes no terms with error but remains faithful to the Commands which it has received, to carry the doctrine of Jesus Christ to the uttermost limits of the world and to the end of time, and to protect it in its inviolable integrity. Legitimate dispenser of the teachings of the Gospel it does not reveal itself only as the consoler and Redeemer of souls, but it is still more the internal source of justice and charity, and the propagator as well as the guardian of true liberty, and of that equality which alone is possible here below. In applying the doctrine of its Divine Founder, It maintains a wise equilibrium and marks the true limits between the rights and privileges of society. The equality which it proclaims does not destroy the distinction between the different social classes. It keeps them intact, as nature itself demands, in order to oppose the anarchy of reason emancipated from Faith, and abandoned to its own devices. The liberty which it gives in no wise conflicts with the rights of truth, because those rights are superior to the demands of liberty. Not does it infringe upon the rights of justice, because those rights are superior to the claims of mere numbers or power. Nor does it assail the rights of God because they are superior to the rights of humanity.

Contained within this noble reiteration of the consistent teaching of the Catholic Church is the reminder that the Church "makes no terms with error but remains faithful to the Commands which it has received," something that should lead us to ask the following question: How is it possible for the Catholic Church to embrace and to promote the error of religious liberty, which was condemned repeatedly by pope after pope prior to the Second Vatican Council and its wretched aftermath of apostasy and accommodation to the prevailing spirit of the world, the flesh and the devil?

Pope Benedict XV, writing in his first encyclical letter, Ad Beatissimi Apostolorum, November 1, 1914, sounded a similar theme as Pope Leo in Tametsi:

Let the Princes and Rulers of peoples remember this truth, and let them consider whether it is a prudent and safe idea for governments or for states to separate themselves from the holy religion of Jesus Christ, from which their authority receives such strength and support. Let them consider again and again, whether it is a measure of political wisdom to seek to divorce the teaching of the Gospel and of the Church from the ruling of a country and from the public education of the young. Sad experience proves that human authority fails where religion is set aside. The fate of our first parent after the Fall is wont to come also upon nations. As in his case, no sooner had his will turned from God than his unchained passions rejected the sway of the will; so, too, when the rulers of nations despise divine authority, in their turn the people are wont to despise their human authority. There remains, of course, the expedient of using force to repress popular risings; but what is the result? Force can repress the body, but it cannot repress the souls of men.

The Modern State, including the United States of America, was born as the illegitimate issue of Protestantism and Judeo-Masonry and a score of related beliefs and ideologies and philosophies that all agree on several essential points:

1) That man can create a just social order without any reference to the Incarnation of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity made Man in Our Lady's virginal and immaculate womb.

2) That man can pursue personal virtue without having belief in, access to or cooperation with Sanctifying Grace.

3) That man does not need to subordinate all of his actions, whether personal or social, without any exception whatsoever to the totality of the Deposit of Faith that Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ has entrusted solely to the Catholic Church.

4) That is is a virtue for men of divergent "opinions" to express themselves openly in order to "discover" the common good and how to pursue it, an essentially Hegelian view of the world that has been adopted by conciliarism in its efforts to embrace pluralism by means of "dialogue" and "inculturation," especially in the context of what purports to be the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.

One can see quite plainly that the errors of the Modern State, which has committed all manner of crimes against God and man, are really the errors of conciliarism.

Benedict XVI believes that man can create a just social order without the confessionally Catholic State.

Benedict XVI believes that men can pursue virtue without having recourse to Sanctifying Grace. He believes that the Mosaic Covenant is valid to save Jews. He stated publicly last year that a murdered Protestant syncretist, Roger Schutz, had attained "eternal joy." He believes in the errors of "Universal Salvation" propagated by one of his chief mentors, the late Father Hans Urs von Balthasar.

Benedict XVI believes, quite obviously, in "inter-religious dialogue," specifically and categorically rejecting any urgent necessity to convert Protestants or Jews or the Orthodox to the Catholic Church.

Benedict XVI believes that it is good enough for men to have a generic belief in God and in natural morality, something that Pope Leo XIII wrote in Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus leads to social chaos:

So great is this struggle of the passions and so serious the dangers involved, that we must either anticipate ultimate ruin or seek for an efficient remedy. It is of course both right and necessary to punish malefactors, to educate the masses, and by legislation to prevent crime in every possible way: but all this is by no means sufficient. The salvation of the nations must be looked for higher. A power greater than human must be called in to teach men's hearts, awaken in them the sense of duty, and make them better. This is the power which once before saved the world from destruction when groaning under much more terrible evils. Once remove all impediments and allow the Christian spirit to revive and grow strong in a nation, and that nation will be healed. The strife between the classes and the masses will die away; mutual rights will be respected. If Christ be listened to, both rich and poor will do their duty. The former will realise that they must observe justice and charity, the latter self-restraint and moderation, if both are to be saved. Domestic life will be firmly established ( by the salutary fear of God as the Lawgiver. In the same way the precepts of the natural law, which dictates respect for lawful authority and obedience to the laws, will exercise their influence over the people. Seditions and conspiracies will cease. Wherever Christianity rules over all without let or hindrance there the order established by Divine Providence is preserved, and both security and prosperity are the happy result. The common welfare, then, urgently demands a return to Him from whom we should never have gone astray; to Him who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life,-and this on the part not only of individuals but of society as a whole. We must restore Christ to this His own rightful possession. All elements of the national life must be made to drink in the Life which proceedeth from Him- legislation, political institutions, education, marriage and family life, capital and labour. Everyone must see that the very growth of civilisation which is so ardently desired depends greatly upon this, since it is fed and grows not so much by material wealth and prosperity, as by the spiritual qualities of morality and virtue.

Writing fifty-four years before Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus, in 1846, Orestes Brownson noted the following in his essay "Natural Greatness" (see: Orestes Brownson Society - National Greatness):

What, then, is true national greatness? We answer, that nation is greatest in which man may most easily and effectually fulfil the true and proper end of man. The nation, under the point of view we here consider the subject, is in the people. Its greatness must, then, be in the greatness of the people. The people are a collection or aggregation of individuals, and their greatness taken collectively is simply their greatness taken individually. Consequently the greatness of a nation is the greatness of the individuals that compose it. The question of national greatness resolves itself, therefore, into the question of individual greatness. The greatness of the individual consists in his fulfilling the great ends of his existence, the ends for which Almighty God made him and placed him here. No man is truly great who neglects life's great ends, nor can one be said in truth to approach greatness any further than he fulfils them.

In order, then, to determine in what true national greatness consists, we must determine in what consists true individual greatness; and in order to determine in what true individual greatness consists, we must determine what is the true end of man; that is, what is the end to which Almighty God has appointed man, and which he is while here to labor to secure. What, then, is the end of man?  For what has our Maker placed us here? To what has he bidden us aspire? Were we placed here merely to be born and to die,-to live for a moment, continue our species, toil, suffer, drop into the grave to rot, and be no more for ever? If this be our end, true greatness will consist in living for this life only, and in being great in that which pertains to this life. The greatest man will be he who succeeds best in amassing the goods of this world, in securing its honors and luxuries, or simply in multiplying for himself the means of sensual enjoyment. In a word, the greatest man will be he who most abounds in wealth and luxury.

We mean not to say, that, in point of fact, wealth and luxury, worldly honors and sensual gratifications, are the chief goods of even this life; but simply that they would be, if this were our only life, if our destiny were a destiny to be accomplished in this world. It is because this world is not our home, because we are merely travellers through it, and our destination is a world beyond it, that the life of justice and sanctity yields us even here our truest and most substantial pleasure. But confine man to this life, let it be true that he has no destiny beyond it, and nothing could, relatively to him, be called great or good, not included under the heads of wealth and luxury. Nothing could be counted or conceived of as of the least value to him that does not directly or indirectly minister to his sensual enjoyment. No infidel moralist has ever been able, without going out of his own system, or want of system, to conceive of any thing higher, nobler, more valuable, than sensual pleasure.

But this life is not our only life, and our destiny is not accomplished here. The grave is not our final doom; this world is not our home; we were not created for this world alone; and there is for us a life beyond this life. But even this, if we stop with it, does not answer our question. We may conceive of a future life as the simple continuation of our present natural life, and such the future life is conceived to be by not a few among us, who nevertheless flatter themselves that they are firm believers in the life and immortality brought to light through the Gospel. Every being may be said to have a natural destiny or end, which its nature is fitted and intended to gain. The Creator, in creating a being with a given nature, has given that being a pledge of the means and conditions of fulfilling it, of attaining to its natural end. Man has evidently been created with a nature that does not and cannot find its complete fulfilment in this life. He has a natural capacity for more than is actually attainable here. In this capacity he has the promise or pledge of his Maker that he shall live again.


The promises of God cannot fail. Man therefore must and will live again. But this is only the pledge, so to speak, of a natural immortality, and reveals to us only a natural destiny. It is only a continuation of our natural life in another world. The end we are to labor for, and the means we are to adopt to gain it, must be precisely what they would be in case our life were to terminate at the grave. Our future life being still a natural life, what is wisest and best for that portion we are now living would be wisest and best for that portion we are hereafter to live. Hence, what is wisest and best for time would be wisest and best for eternity.

Hence it is that we find so many who, though professing belief in a future life, judge all things as if this life were our only life. They look to the future life only as the continuation of the present, and expect from it only the completion of their natural destiny. They agree in all their moral judgments, in all their estimates of the worth of things or of actions, with those who believe in no future life at all. They profess to hope for a future life, but live only for time; because their future life is to be only a continuation of time. Hence they say, as we ourselves were for years accustomed to say, He who lives wisely for time lives wisely for eternity; create a heaven here, and you will have done your best to secure your title to a heaven hereafter.

Hence it is that the morality of many who profess to be Christians is the same which is adopted and defended by infidels. This is so obviously the case, that we not unfrequently find men who call themselves Christians commending downright unbelievers in Christianity as good moral men, and who see no reason why the morality of the infidel should not be the same in kind as the morality of the Christian. Hence it is supposed that morality may be taught in our schools, without teaching any peculiar or distinctive doctrine of Christianity. Morality, we are told, is independent of religion, and not a few regard it as sufficient without religion. So common has this mode of thinking and speaking become amongst us, that we heard the other day a tolerably intelligent Catholic, who would by no means admit himself to be deficient in the understanding or practice of his Catholic duties, say, that, if a man were only a good moral man, he did not care what was his distinctive religious belief. Many who go further, and contend that religion is necessary to morality, contend for its necessity only as a sort of police establishment. It is necessary, be cause the natural sanctions of the moral law are not quite sufficient to secure obedience, and religion must be called in by its hopes and fears to strengthen them.

Now all this is perfectly consistent and right, if it be true that man has only a natural destiny. We ought, in such a case, to judge all things which concern us precisely as if this were our only life. Religion could be of no value further than it strengthened the police, kept people from picking one another's pockets or cutting one another's throats. But man's destiny is not natural, but supernatural. Almighty God created him with a specific nature, but not for an end in the order of that nature, or to be attained by its simple fulfilment. He created him to his own image and likeness, but appointed him to a supernatural destiny,-to an end above what is attainable by the fulfilment of his nature,- to an end not promised in his nature, and which is not be stowed as the reward of fulfilling it. This end is to know and love God; but in a sense far higher than we can know and love him by our natural powers, and as he is now beheld through a glass, darkly, or seen dimly through the medium of his works, as we see the cause in the effect. It is to see him face to face, and to know and love him with a knowledge and love the same in kind, though not in degree, with which God knows and loves himself ;-this is the end for which man was intended, and which it is made his duty and his high privilege to seek. But this end surpasses the utmost capacity of our nature, and requires not only a supernatural revelation of God, but the supernatural elevation of our nature itself. It consists in our being made partakers of the divine nature in an ineffable sense, and in a sense above that in which we partake of it in being created after the image and likeness of God. Hence, St. Peter says, "By whom [Jesus Christ] he hath given us very great and precious promises, that by these you may be made partakers of his divine nature." So also St. John :-" We are now the sons of God, and it hath not yet appeared what we shall be. We know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; because we shall see him as he is."

This fact in these times is overlooked. Men have wished to rationalize the Gospel, to find a philosophic basis for the mysteries of faith. In attempting this, they have labored to bring the whole of divine revelation ,within the domain of reason, and have been led to exclude, as no part of it whatever they found themselves unable to bring within that domain. Reason is necessarily restricted to the order of nature, and can in no instance, of itself, go out of that order. Hence, revelation has come very widely to be regarded as only a republication of the natural law, as at best 'only a running commentary on it, designed simply to explain the natural order, and not to reveal any thing above it.

Men who claim to be Christians, and even ministers of the Gospel, everywhere abound, who have no faith in the supernatural order, scarcely a conception of it. We spent nearly two hours the other day trying to enable a Protestant minister, and him by no means a weak or ignorant one, even to conceive of the supernatural; but in vain. So perverted had his mind become by the false theologies of modern times, that he could attach no meaning to the assertion, "There is a supernatural order." He could use the word supernatural, but it had no meaning for his mind not within the order of nature. Thousands are in the same sad condition. To them nature is all, and all is nature. Indeed, the word nature itself has no definite meaning for them. If a man by a word raise the dead, it is natural; if Moses smite the rock and living waters gush forth, it is natural,-all by a natural power, a natural law. Travelling in the same direction, they lose themselves in a wilderness of absurdities.


Natural laws cease to be laws imposed on nature, laws she must obey, and from which she cannot withdraw herself, and become forces, agents, creators. It is not strange, then that they lose sight of the supernatural destiny of man, and look only for a natura1 destiny, to be obtained not as a reward for obedience to grace, but as the natural consequence of the cultivation or development of our natural powers.  Read the writings of the celebrated Dr. Channing, or of the school which he founded or to which he was attached, and you shall never find a single recognition of the supernatural order, properly so called,-any allusion to a supernatural destiny. The highest end you will find presented is that to which we may attain by the unfolding of our higher nature, of our natural sentiments of love and reverence. The school goes so far as to contend that our nature is susceptible of an unbounded good, and that our natural sentiments of love and reverence are capable of an infinite expansion. Yet these are rational Christians, and they boast of their reason! They talk of the absurdities of Catholic theology, and see no absurdity in supposing that a finite nature may be infinitely expanded, or that a nature can be something more than it is without any thing super-natural.

But this by the way. The true end for which man is to live is the supernatural end to which we are appointed, the beatitude which God hath promised to all that love and serve him here. His true end is not the fulfilment of nature, but what the sacred Scriptures term "eternal life"; and "This is life eternal, that they may know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent." We cannot know God, without loving him. Hence we say, the end of man is to know and love God. But to know him intuitively, as he knows himself; for we are to see him as he is, -not as he appears through the medium of his works, but as he is in himself. We cannot thus know him naturally, for thus to know him exceeds the power of the highest possible created intelligence. We must be like him, before we can see him as he is,-be made, in a supernatural sense, partakers of his divine nature. To know him intuitively as he is in himself, is, however, the glorious destiny to which we are appointed, and to which we may attain, if we will. A more glorious destiny we cannot desire. In it we possess God himself, who is the sovereign good. Even here we find our highest good in knowing the truth and loving goodness, dim as is our view of the one, and feeble as is our hold of the other. What must it be, then, when we come to behold, by the light of glory, our God face to face, with no cloud intervening to obscure his infinite beauty, no distance between us and his ineffable love? Well may it be said, "Eye hath not seen, ear hath not heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive what our God hath prepared for them that love him." He will reward them with no inferior, no created good; but will give them himself, will himself be their portion for ever.

But this supernatural destiny, since it is supernatural, is not naturally attainable. We may cultivate all our natural powers, we may fill up the highest and broadest capacities of our nature, realize the highest ideal, and yet be infinitely, -we use the word in its strict sense,-infinitely below it. It is not attained to by "self-culture," by the development and exercise of our highest natural powers, including even the boasted sentiments of love and reverence. It is nothing that is due, or ever can be due, to our nature. It is a gift, and can be obtained only as bestowed. But it will be bestowed only on the obedient, and is bestowed as the reward of obedience. Our destiny is eternal life, and the condition of obtaining it is obedience. Obedience is not, as some of the sects teach, the end for which we were made. We were made not that we might obey God, but that we might possess God, and we obey him as the condition of possessing him.

"Natural Greatness" is a stinging rebuke to Modernity's self-assured belief that it can create a veritable paradise on earth to make man happy. It is also a stinging rebuke to Modernism's accommodation with Modernity's belief in the secular basis of the State and of national life. It is thus a stinging rebuke to the conciliarist concept of "healthy secularity," which has compounded and aided and abetted the crimes of the Modern State, including those of the United States of America, as the absolute rights of God and the legitimate liberties of His rational creatures are usurped by those who hold the levers of political power to pursue ends that benefit themselves and their paymasters, whether domestic or foreign.

There is no earthly answer to stop the crimes of the Modern State, stained from the very beginning with its anti-Incarnational bias. There is only a Heavenly answer, Our Lady's Fatima Peace Plan.

Once again, ladies and gentlemen, anyone who contends that Our Lady's Fatima Message has been fulfilled had better look around the world at present. Peace? Where is it? In the United States, where babies are killed, both surgically and chemically, under cover of law, where we are the wards of the state whose conversations and bank accounts are monitored in the name of a fascistic sense of "national security"? In the Mideast, where different bands of people, Talmudic Jews and Mohammedans, whose souls are steeped in captivity to the devil by means of Original Sin kill each other while innocent civilians die by the scores in Lebanon in the process? In Iraq, where Chaldean Rite Catholics and Assyrian Orthodox Christians are being attacked regularly as we "congratulate" ourselves on liberating the country from Saddam Hussein? In Russia, where a former head of the KGB rules as a czar and as a commissar? In Iran? In North Korea? Where? Where is the certain period of peace?

We must, therefore, continue to pray and fast and to make sacrifices, offered up freely to Our Lady's Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart as her consecrated slaves, for the fulfillment of her Fatima Message, keeping in mind at all times that the end of our lives could occur this very night, that we may not live to see the light of the morning, that we might awake with the eyes of the soul to encounter the terrible moment of our own Particular Judgments.

The Modern State is an aberration in the world. Modernism is an aberration in the life of the Church. Both will perish completely and utterly when some pope consecrates Russia to Our Lady's Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart with all of the world's bishops. We should consider it a singular privilege to live in these times so that we can offer our prayers and sacrifices and penances and humiliations and hardships, each of which pales into insignificance when we consider how our sins caused the Hearts of Jesus and Mary to break on Good Friday, to the Blessed Trinity through Our Lady's Immaculate Heart.

We may not be alive to witness the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Please God and by His ineffable graces, though, may our lived witness as Catholics who remain faithful to the perennial teaching of Holy Mother Church without any concessions to conciliarism, whether liturgical or doctrinal, help to plant a few seeds for the restoration of Tradition in the Church and Christendom in the world.

Vivat Christus Rex!

Our Lady of Good Success, 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 Nazarius, Celsus, Innocent and Victor, pray for us.

Saint James the Greater, son of Zebedee, pray for us.

Saint John the Evangelist, son of Zebedee, pray for us.

Saint Anne, pray for us.

Saint Joachim, pray for us.

Saint Martha, pray for us.

Saint Vincent de Paul, pray for us.

Saint Augustine, pray for us.

Saint Thomas Aquinas, pray for us.

Saint Vincent Ferrer, pray for us.

Saint Sebastian, pray for us.

Saint Tarcisius, pray for us.

Saint Lucy, pray for us.

Saint Agnes, pray for us.

Saint Agatha, pray for us.

Saint Bridget of Sweden, pray for us.

Saint Catherine of Sweden, pray for us.

Saint Philomena, pray for us.

Saint John of the Cross, pray for us.

Saint John Bosco, pray for us.

Saint John Mary Vianney, pray for us.

Saint Teresa of Avila, pray for us.

Saint Therese Lisieux, pray for us.

Saint Bernadette Soubirous, pray for us.

Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich, pray for us.

Blessed Pauline Jaricot, pray for us.

Blessed Francisco, pray for us.

Blessed Jacinta, pray for us.

Sister Lucia, pray for us.

 

The Longer Version of the Saint Michael the Archangel Prayer, composed by Pope Leo XIII, 1888

O glorious Archangel Saint Michael, Prince of the heavenly host, be our defense in the terrible warfare which we carry on against principalities and powers, against the rulers of this world of darkness, spirits of evil.  Come to the aid of man, whom God created immortal, made in His own image and likeness, and redeemed at a great price from the tyranny of the devil.  Fight this day the battle of our Lord, together with  the holy angels, as already thou hast fought the leader of the proud angels, Lucifer, and his apostate host, who were powerless to resist thee, nor was there place for them any longer in heaven.  That cruel, that ancient serpent, who is called the devil or Satan who seduces the whole world, was cast into the abyss with his angels.  Behold this primeval enemy and slayer of men has taken courage.  Transformed into an angel of light, he wanders about with all the multitude of wicked spirits, invading the earth in order to blot out the Name of God and of His Christ, to seize upon, slay, and cast into eternal perdition, souls destined for the crown of eternal glory.  That wicked dragon pours out. as a most impure flood, the venom of his malice on men of depraved mind and corrupt heart, the spirit of lying, of impiety, of blasphemy, and the pestilent breath of impurity, and of every vice and iniquity.  These most crafty enemies have filled and inebriated with gall and bitterness the Church, the spouse of the Immaculate Lamb, and have laid impious hands on Her most sacred possessions. In the Holy Place itself, where has been set up the See of the most holy Peter and the Chair of Truth for the light of the world, they have raised the throne of their abominable impiety with the iniquitous design that when the Pastor has been struck the sheep may be scattered.  Arise then, O invincible Prince, bring help against the attacks of the lost spirits to the people of God, and give them the victory.  They venerate thee as their protector and patron; in thee holy Church glories as her defense against the malicious powers of hell; to thee has God entrusted the souls of men to be established in heavenly beatitude.  Oh, pray to the God of peace that He may put Satan under our feet, so far conquered that he may no longer be able to hold men in captivity and harm the Church.  Offer our prayers in the sight of the Most High, so that they may quickly conciliate the mercies of the Lord; and beating down the dragon, the ancient serpent, who is the devil and Satan, do thou again make him captive in the abyss, that he may no longer seduce the nations.  Amen.

Verse: Behold the Cross of the Lord; be scattered ye hostile powers.

Response: The Lion of the Tribe of Juda has conquered the root of David.

Verse: Let Thy mercies be upon us, O Lord.

Response: As we have hoped in Thee.

Verse: O Lord hear my prayer.

Response: And let my cry come unto Thee.

Verse: Let us pray.  O God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, we call upon Thy holy Name, and as suppliants, we implore Thy clemency, that by the intercession of Mary, ever Virgin, immaculate and our Mother, and of the glorious Archangel Saint Michael, Thou wouldst deign to help us against Satan and all other unclean spirits, who wander about the world for the injury of the human race and the ruin of our souls. 

Response:  Amen.  

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 






© Copyright 2006, Thomas A. Droleskey. All rights reserved.