Monday, February 25, 2013

Pontification on the Next Pontificate: The Restoration of Papal Authority and the Greatest Schism


By Steve Bolton
 
 “I have come to bring division.”
Jesus gave this startling mission statement in both Luke 12:49-53 and Matthew 10:34-37, where he continues, “Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to turn 'a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law - a man's enemies will be the members of his own household.' Anyone who loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me.” If the next pope is actually a loyal follower of Jesus, he will be an equally divisive figure. Soft-pedaling has become such a bad habit among the clergy in the last few decades that few Catholics today are made aware of the unpleasant sticks like this that Jesus included among the pleasant carrots in his teachings. This includes the “dark half” of the Beatitudes, in which he gives warnings like these: “Woe unto you when you are rich, for you have received your consolation…Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for that is how their fathers treated the false prophets.”[1] Most of the wayward Catholics of America and Europe want a tame but popular pope they can speak well of, who will foster a false appearance of unity by downplaying or even betraying the difficult teachings of Jesus.
The Catholic Church is dying in the West precisely because the vast majority of the clergy are entirely willing to approve false teachings in return for personal popularity, through too much fluffy talk about unity and peace, when in fact they are rubber-stamping treason and peace at any price. The Devil can only operate in shades of grey, so the sword Jesus spoke of is meant to cleave it into its constituent colors of white and black, so that men can see clearly what good and evil are. To put it as plainly as possible, evil men, in every age and every nation, do not want others to see the sharp dividing line between the two, so they attempt to obscure it. Quite often, the sins they commit amount to acts of war, while the peace they speak of is meant to disarm any opposition before it can fight back, which is not Christian. Despite the fact that he spoke of the sword and whipped the money changers in the Temple, neither Jesus nor any of his followers ever advocated war for its own sake, but they did not forbid us to fight back against the undeclared wars of others. In fact, it is sometimes our duty to stand up for those whose rights are being violated; Christians are enjoined to turn the other cheek against wrongs committed against themselves, but it is cowardice to turn a blind eye wrongs committed against others, for the same reason that it is obviously evil to allow a mugger to freely beat an old lady. The worst modern example of this is the slaughter of more than one billion babies worldwide through abortion in the last four decades, which is an act of war so vast and so horrible that the mind can barely conceive of it, against an enemy that cannot possibly fight back; for them, the Apocalypse has already come. Attempting to build unity in atmosphere where such crimes can occur without any semblance of resistance actually amount to whitewashing them; there is no peace from such a surrender, only a peace of the grave for the innocents who will continue to be victimized by whatever brand of injustice evil men choose to permit. The only way to authentic unity and actual peace is to either convert them, or to physically prevent them from inflicting injustice on others – but neither action is possible if people only have a vague notion of what they should be converted to, or what justice is. This is why Jesus taught highly specific things, whereas their enemies always speak in terms of glittering generalities, such as vague appreciations for “love” and “peace,” without sharply defining what they are.
 
The Structure of Authority in the Catholic Church
 
Clear definitions are required before definite action, so anyone who wants to frustrate those actions will always try to water down them down first. For two millennia, the papacy has been the sole reliable defender of the dogmas and doctrines of Christ, without which Christian action is impossible. The point of bringing division is not for the sake of division, for the ultimate goal is authentic unity, which can only come when the whole world chooses to become Catholic. The problem is that a certain section of the populace, in every epoch of history, has simply balked at the idea of following the commandments of Jesus, his forerunners or his successors; they are almost always concentrated among the rich, the powerful, the beautiful and the popular among every society, who don’t want to be told that there are strict limits on the gifts they have been given. For the last 2,000 years, and even further back to the days of Moses, there has always been some faction among the fortunate who want to smudge the dividing line between good and evil. Because they tend to be concentrate among the upper crust of any society, they often have the temporal power to inculcate their views in the secular power structure and among the common people, or even to persecute the Church. The same is true in the present age, in which the spoiled rich nations of North America and Europe are clamoring for change in the Catholic Church, while remaining completely ignorant  of the fact that the silent majority among the poor, the illiterate and the downtrodden in Latin America, Africa and other parts of the Third World are joining it in droves for precisely the opposite reason. The Church really is dying in the West, but the Good News is that the West doesn’t matter half as much as it once did. The stage is set for a schism of epic proportions that will dwarf the Reformation in its consequences. The schism, in fact, has already been under way for decades, and has only been hushed up through the inaction of wpopes like John Paul II, Benedict XVI and many of their predecessors, as far back as Pius XII (1939-1958), all of whom were great men but exceptionally poor administrators. The Church may be able to avoid an open break at the next conclave in March, but it will be progressively more difficult to contain the unrecognized split for much longer. Nor should the electors at the papal conclave attempt to contain it, for the sooner we elect a pope who’s willing to actually perform his duties, the sooner we can rebuild.
It might be possible to retain some of the hundreds of millions of Catholics who have already left the Church in the hearts by caving in and changing teachings they don’t like, but the problem is that then the Church wouldn’t be Catholic. As I wrote several months ago in Mali and the Return of Mohammed, the only person with the authority to define what Islam actually consists of was Mohammed, and how he chose to define it is now set in stone as a matter of historical fact; people can pass off a counterfeit version of it, as many Westernized Muslims do, but it is not actually Islam. Likewise, the only persons with the authority to define the U.S. Constitution and its amenders, and the meanings they assigned to its words are all unalterable matters of historical fact; any time the Supreme Court cites any other arguments for its decisions besides the historical evidence for what the framers and amenders thought, then they are rewriting it, not interpreting it, which they do not have the Constitutional power to. Likewise, definite statements can be made about what Christ taught; he must have said certain things and did not say certain other things, which are matters of historical fact, regardless of whether we know those facts. Christianity is not something malleable; by logical necessity, certain brands of it must be closer to the truth, just as 2 + 2 = 6 is closer to the correct answer of 4 than 2 + 2 = 3,200. Catholicism is the brand of Christianity which has consistently claimed for 2,000 years to have been invested with the infallible authority to say what those teachings are, but not with the power to change them one iota. This does not mean that any statement by any clergyman is divinely protected, for Catholic teachings are invested with different levels of authority that follow a clear hierarchy. At the top are the decisions of ecumenical councils, which occur just once every few generations, but only when accepted by the pope, who has a similar guarantee of papal infallibility under rare conditions.
This is a much maligned and misunderstood term that in no way implies that popes are free of sin (although in comparison to the rest of humanity, most of them have generally been quite heroic) or that every utterance out of any pope’s mouth must be obeyed. In fact, it’s a quite unpleasant gift, because what it amounts to is a guarantee that in certain situations, God will stuff a sock in the pope’s mouth to keep him from saying bad things. Without this negative charism, Benedict XVI could conceivably wake up tomorrow and tell the world that it must accept the dogma that skipping rope is a sin. Infallibility merely means that God will step in and prevent the ecumenical councils and popes from making arbitrary decisions about doctrine like this. He provides less protection for the next highest rank of teachings, those promulgated by popes in documents like encyclicals and bulls, which nevertheless require “religious submission of the will.” No such guarantee is given to the next rung down the ladder, among the pope’s designated representatives at the Vatican, such as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Below that rung is the individual teaching authorities possessed by the bishops, then down to their priests, both of whom are charged only with repeating doctrines, not creating them. Catholics are taught to obey valid teaching authority, but it is not valid for a lower rank to contradict the rulings of a higher rank; therefore, it would be an act of disobedience to obey the false teachings of a bishop who claimed that the pope was wrong, just as it would be for a private to obey the orders of a corporal rather than the Joint Chiefs of Staff.  Most of the bishops of the West have been in precisely such a state of rebellion against the papacy for decades now, on a wide range of issues which they have no authority to reinterpret to their liking. This whole structure of authority all seems quite airy and theoretical, like many other philosophies concocted by human beings throughout history which ended up having little bearing on reality – until you become familiar enough with history to realize that the teachings of every other denomination and every other secular philosophy have always changed from one generation to the next. Check the records of any Protestant denomination to confirm for yourself that none of them could possibly have the same supernatural protection. Communism is another clear example, because although it was often portrayed as a monolithic menace in the 20th Century, there was quite a bit of variation in it between Cuba and China, or Czechoslovakia and Cambodia; even within the Soviet Union itself, Communism was a very different thing under Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev, Brezhnev and Gorbachev respectively. The Catholic Church is the only institution which has managed to maintain the same body of doctrine for more than a single generation, let alone two millennia. I know this because like a typical muckraking journalist, I set out to disprove what I thought was a preposterous claim, by sorting through as many encyclicals, ecumenical documents and other source I could, spread out across every epoch and conceivable topic. I couldn’t do it. All I found was century after century of the Church repeating the same miracle of preserving the same teaching against all odds and all manner of persistent outside pressures. For example, in the case of usury, the Church infallibly defined many times throughout the Middle Ages that taking any interest at all is a mortal sin, and that no one is obligated to pay it; anyone who disagrees with this is not to receive Christian burial. For hundreds of years, merchants badgered the Church to change it, but as Pope Alexander III told them, his office had no power to abrogate this dogma. Nor has it been abrogated since. There is a Vatican Bank now and dioceses routinely charge interest, plus Catholics are no longer taught to use interest-free banking, but this has all been accomplished through a handful of letters sent out in the 1830s from an office at the Vatican, not by a statement of a pope or church council under conditions of infallibility; in fact, even the arguments used in the letters themselves contradict Pope Benedict XIV’s stern condemnation in the 1745 encyclical Vix Pervenit, which is not infallible but still at the level where it requires religious submission of the will. This scam pioneered the use similar shady tactics since then, to create the appearance that many other teachings can be ignored or changed as well, such as those forbidding divorce and other sins that are popular today. As a result of the usury debacle, the world has been tormented by incessant banking crashes and onerous debt peonage, all of which have made the rich richer and further impoverished the poor of the whole planet. As a result of the similar scams which have followed since then, the world is now also awash in broken families, starvation, rampant militarism, rapid depopulation and legalized child murder. In this way, heresy is not merely a lie about what Catholicism is, or tampering with a divine message, but a menace to the peace and safety of the world.
All of the voices which are calling for the Church to “modernize” or “change” or “update” its teachings, on the grounds that it is “out of step” with the people of the West, are wasting their time because they can’t possibly succeed, nor should they. Such demands have failed for two millennia and counting. If you’re asking a valid church council or pope to repudiate any of its dogmatic teachings, particularly on morals, then you’re wasting your time banging your head against a wall, as I once did. Many external aspects of the Church could be validly changed, such as the language of the Mass, changing the style of the music, building cathedrals with different kinds of architecture or the like, but such things have never been part of the Church’s infallible teaching Magisterium, unlike its unpopular moral commandments on topics like contraception. As I have written many times before, good cases can be made that every one of these commandments protects society against some form of self-destructive or unjust behavior; for example, birth prevention is rapidly sapping the strength of Western civilization through a half-dozen different side effects that I listed in The Love of Life vs. the Love of Money: The Clash of Catholicism and Commercialism in the Contraception Controversy. Those who disagree with my conclusions are free to disparage that teaching or any other, but turnabout is fair play, because freedom of speech and the press are not equivalent to immunity from criticism of critics themselves. Either way, if history is any guide, they cannot possibly succeed in overturning these teachings, at least through the means of valid church council or infallible papal proclamation. Anyone who wants to consult the original documents released by these institutions over the last two thousand years cannot help but conclude that they are divinely protected against serious error – whether they want to be or not – in what amounts to a miracle preserved in paper. The rest of the Church does not enjoy the same guarantee though. Nor are the church councils or pope forced to teach what they should; they are only prevented from teaching what they should not under certain strict conditions. Nor can the pope force people to accept his authority. This leaves open numerous avenues of attack which heretics can exploit to gut the authority of these institutions, including many forms of subterfuge which were pioneered in the usury scam and perfected around the time of the last valid church council, Vatican II (1962-1965).
 
A Requiem for Heresy: Two Thousand Years of Futility and Counting
 
The easiest means of resisting the Church has always been to simply ignore its teachings while simultaneously remaining a member, which constitutes heresy, or leaving it altogether, which is the quintessence of apostasy. When parishioners continue to take Eucharist in a state of heresy they compound their sins with sacrilege, but the best the pope can do it warn them that this is the case; all a formal excommunication is simply a public warning that a person has already chosen to excommunicate themselves, by voluntarily leaving the Church. He cannot force heretics to stop taking it, aside from firing local pastors who provide it anyways or having their parishioners arrested for trespassing, which would require the cooperation of local civil authorities. The papacy has no secular power. It has some wealth, but most of that is in the form of church buildings which cannot easily be sold and converted to cash. Its armed forces consist of about 500 Swiss guards. As Stalin once sneered, “How many divisions does the pope have?” The joke was on him, because a few decades later, the Soviet Army suddenly ceased to exist without a shot being fired, but the papacy was still firmly in place. This has been the fate of every movement which has sought to break the Church, all of which have been broken themselves on the rock of Peter like ships against a rocky reef. Furthermore, as I discuss in great detail in The Falling Away, a consistent trend can be seen in every age of Christian history, in which various sects have broken away from the Catholic Church only to come to naught, while the Church  has always continued to grow, without pause. Whether or not Isaiah 9:7 is meant to be taken literally, “Of the increase of his government and peace there will be no end” has been literally fulfilled in every age up to the present. The Church always appears to be in decline, because the places where it is well-established tend to grow tired of it, especially after it brings them better material benefits; as the saying goes, “The Church is the mother of prosperity, and the daughter killed the mother.” Yet at the same time, it has always gained more members and increased the size of its territory among poorer and humbler people than it has lost among the wealthy and arrogant centers of civilization.
This is the Cliff’s Notes version of how we came to account for a sixth of the world’s six billion souls, despite having our backs to the wall in every generation. The Church started off with Jesus and a handful of followers being persecuted in Israel. By the time the Romans had finished scattering the Jewish people to the four winds in 70 A.D., the Church had already spread throughout the Empire. For half a thousand years, the Middle East and North Africa were the center of the Church, till Mohammed’s followers conquered these lands, when it proceeded to make even more converts among the Vikings and other barbarians of northern Europe. Despite the fact that the papacy was headquartered in Rome, Eastern Europe represented the bastion of Christian civilization until the Great Schism of 1054. A strange thing happened after the Eastern churches balked at papal authority though: they immediately stopped making converts. The Greek, Russian and other Eastern Orthodox churches were once centers of crusading zeal, but after they left the Catholic fold, their accomplishments in theology and proselytization instantly came to a dead halt. Nor have they resumed in the last thousand years. The Western European heretics who broke away in the so-called Reformation have had the opposite problem: for the last 500 years, they have succeeded in nothing except splintering into ever-smaller sects, whose doctrines get narrower and nuttier with each passing generation. To put it simply, the Eastern Orthodox cut off their feet and became immobile, while the Protestants cut off their heads, and have been running around like chickens bereft of them ever since. Yet at the same time the Reformation was apparently bringing the Church to ruin, it was quietly and quickly converting most of the Western Hemisphere.
The same pattern still holds in the present age. During the last century the headlines in the North America and Western Europe have been full of opinion polls which show disastrous declines in the numbers of so-called Catholics who attend Mass weekly, or who have lost faith in the mandatory moral teachings against crimes like abortion, divorce, contraception and homosexuality, not to mention sins that the right wing is fond of, like hoarding, using monopoly power, charging unjust prices, paying unjust wages, usury and speculation. At the same time, the Catholic Church and those brands of Protestantism which are closest to it have succeeded in converting much of sub-Saharan Africa in the 20th Century alone, in one of the fastest conversions of a continent in history. Likewise, they are beginning to make promising inroads throughout East and Central Asia, particularly in South Korea, China and India. Whenever the Church finds itself unwanted, it merely goes elsewhere and becomes bigger than ever. And when heretics break away from it, they end up embracing even stupider and more vile ideas than the heretics who came before them. Almost all of the heresies of the first millennium A.D. were controversies about the nature of Christ, which were quite advanced topics that mistakes could understandably be made about. The popular mistakes of today are crude moral ones that lead directly to injustice against other human beings. Arius would never have dared to permit abortion; Nestorius can point his finger at this generation from beyond the grave, for he would never have dreamed of commending divorce or gay marriage. Of course, these long-term global trends cannot continue indefinitely without something giving way, because there is only so much territory left that this battle between fidelity and infidelity has yet to touch. Furthermore, these processes are actually speeding up with each passing century. On top of that, the foolish teachings that heretics are willing to swallow keep getting uglier all the time. The same melodramatic pattern is being replaying in our generation, except on a global scale. The enemies of the Church have almost succeeded in eradicating it from San Francisco all the way to Vladivostok; the buildings still stand, there is still a valid priesthood in place, but the sacraments they hold do people little good because they don’t believe in Catholicism itself. Yet the Church is still growing at a torrid pace, this time among the downtrodden and humble people of the Southern Hemisphere and Asia. For all of their wealth and self-centered arrogance, the world doesn’t revolve around America and Europe. This was true in 1900, when Europe accounted for 24 percent of the world’s population, and it’s certainly truer a century later, when its share had fallen to 12.9 percent thanks to self-inflicted depopulation through abortion and contraception. Even in terms of secular forms of power like wealth and military equipment, the West’s influence is shrinking with each passing decade anyways, as I detail in The Retreat of the West. An astute pope would inform America and Europe that we don’t need them, but they will soon need us if they continue to squander their temporal power so rapidly.
Rejection of the authority of the pope may succeed in driving the Church from one corner of the earth, but this has never stopped it from augmenting its authority in two more, much like the hydra of Greek myth. The numbers of false Catholics who obstinately refuse to recognize this hard fact is swelling, so we can expect millions of them to continue to clamor for changes that can’t and shouldn’t ever come to fruition. This includes much of the Western clergy, most of whom lost their faith long ago; just one rejection of a single mandatory dogma or moral teaching makes a person guilty of the mortal sin of heresy, and most of the clergy accept at least a few of them, in a wide variety of combinations. Since the days of Jesus, the Church has been plagued with what is sometimes called the Judas Factor: rebellious clergy who commit treason against it for worldly motives. As Jesus himself said, “Have I not chosen you, the Twelve, and one of you is a Devil?”[2] In the present age, as people have voluntarily fallen away from the Church in the West, it is more apt to say that 11 out of every 12 are devils, for very few of them are willing to teach the people under their care the whole of Catholicism, especially the difficult parts. As I mentioned a moment ago, the intensity of heresy and the violence with which the Church is rejected has increased to unprecedented proportions in our day. One of the symptoms of this has been the sinking of the clergy to new depths, one of which is the deafening silence about the holocaust of abortion in every pulpit, or any other form of injustice for that matter. Another is the perpetration of injustice by the clergy of themselves, the most noxious form of which is the widespread molestation scandal. Another form that was evident throughout the whole last century was the physical abuse of students by dour nuns, who became a running joke in pop culture for routinely paddling their charges with rulers without just cause, thereby driving most of them out of the Church. Perhaps the most dangerous form for the papacy, however, is the threat personified by Cardinal Richelieu (1584-1642), a French cleric renowned for betraying the Catholic cause in the Thirty Years’ War. Such men misuse their offices out of a love of the honor it reflects on them, the accolades they receive in public, the money that sometimes comes from their position, and most of all, the dry thrill of exercising power. These men are even more dangerous than the archetypical priest with a mistress or whatever, for they love pride, the Original Sin, and money, the very root of all evil. Many of them are so-called conservatives or traditionalists who dress well, speak articulately, never have a hair out of place and are entirely orthodox about ceremonial matters – just like the Pharisees and Scribes that Jesus warned against so often in the New Testament. It is these people who succeed most often in undermining the papacy, through stratagems that are insanely clever but entirely cowardly.
The counterfeit arguments in favor of usury that eventually led to the blasphemous establishment of the Vatican Bank were just the beginning of the intrigues that they have succeeded in perpetrating in modern times. They gained influence and grew in numbers rapidly around the time of Vatican II, which was rife with political machinations of every imaginable kind. For a good introduction to these maneuvers, I suggest reading and listening to the works of Fr. Malachi Martin, who was the leading exorcist in America until his death in 1999. Some of the council’s detractors go too far in their criticism, for it enjoyed a guarantee of infallibility and did not swerve from past doctrine a single iota. The problem was that it used such open-ended, airy language that heretics found it easy to claim that it did. For example, since the beginning of the Church, haughty bishops have perpetually claimed to share power with the pope to a far greater extent than they actually do, in what is sometimes been labeled the conciliar heresy. Now it goes by the buzz word of “collegiality,” a term which is being deliberately misunderstood to undermine the pope and the mysterious negative charism his office depends on. Most of the bishops – including that supposed bastion of orthodoxy, Cardinal Tim Dolan – now openly espouse that heresy, on the grounds that Vatican II document Lumen Gentium approves it. To pull off this lie, conciliarists deliberately ignore the explicatory note Pope Paul VI included with that document to clarify it. Another recent example was the decision to allow altar girls in the 1990s. I have no problem with that decision, since it is not a dogmatic matter of life and death and covers subject matter that really can be changed, but it was promulgated in a particularly sleazy way. It came as a surprise to Pope John Paul II, who had promised not to permit altar girls – until unidentified authorities at the Vatican released documents approving it, without any of the usual document identification numbers. Similarly, it is often said that John Paul II gave an address to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences in 1996 which approved the theory of Darwinian evolution. The text of the address does not say this, nor was it actually written by the pope. Later on, it came out that the pope never even gave the address. It was simply a document written by clergy who passed it off as the teaching of the pope. As Martin, a Vatican insider and confidant of the pope, makes clear in his writings and radio addresses, this is but the tip of a large of iceberg of such sly ruses executed throughout that pontificate. By the 1990s, John Paul II was a virtual prisoner at the Vatican, hemmed in by staff who loathed him and couldn’t wait till he passed on, so that they could take another stab at changing doctrines they didn’t like. They impressed on him to retire for more than a decade and he resisted them for a reason. We cannot discount the possibility that Benedict XVI’s unprecedented retirement announcement is the result of similar intrigue, in an effort to maneuver him out of the way. At the time he was elected in 2005, I suspected that cardinals who put him in power wanted another weak pope who would be too frail to resist them, which is exactly what happened. Throughout his pontificate, Benedict XVI was unable to lift a finger against the smorgasbord of abuses which have metastasized throughout the Church for the past generation. Last year he gave biographer Peter Seewald an assessment of what he hoped to accomplish for the remainder of his papacy:  “From me? Not much. I am an old man and the strength stops. I think what I have done is enough.”[3] Aside from holding onto his office, Benedict XVI didn’t accomplish anything at all except allow the multiple cancers eating away at the Church to continue growing unchecked.  This suits the rebellious wing of the clergy just fine, because the longer their abuses continue, the more they will be treated as precedents that will be difficult to uproot.
 
The Pope’s Job Description
 
                Benedict XVI is perhaps the only public figure on the planet deserving of admiration, because he represents the only faction that is still sane, at least by the standards of our ancestors; I applaud him for speaking out against usury and many other crimes, for his viewpoints are entirely orthodox. John Paul II deserves measured admiration for many of the same reasons. Yet the job of the pope is not to be a glad-handing politician, or to cultivate popularity, or to have peace at any price. The job description of the pope is this: he is the only man charged with the responsibility of saying exactly what Catholicism is, of laying down the dividing lines of what is and what is not Catholic. It has an objective reality of its own which cannot be tampered with; just as Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony becomes an entirely different song if too many of the notes are changed, so too does Catholicism become a different philosophy if its doctrines are altered in the slightest degree. The pope is accountable for making it clear to the widest number of people what this thing called Catholicism consists of. If they don’t like it, they are then free to reject it; it is not his task to water it down, or downplay unpopular elements, to make it appear more palatable.  It accomplishes nothing to retain or gain members who called themselves Catholic if they’re not really Catholic. Those who are asking the pope to redefine Catholicism are essentially asking him to lie about it. It is exactly like expecting a man to describe an elephant by substituting a description of a duck-billed platypus. It would be a lie to say that the elephant laid eggs and had a beaver’s tail, but the easiest way to lie would be omit the trunk and other tell-tale parts of an elephant from the description. Jesus said very definite things, which are a matter of historical fact; it is plausible to say that the pope doesn’t know what those facts are, but it is madness to suggest that the doctrines Jesus laid down are malleable. If we go by the accounts given in the Bible, which are the only accounts we have to go on, then Jesus said very specific and difficult things: do this and you’re in, do that and you’re out. Period. He died to give us this message and many others have died since then to preserve it. I have a hunch that in a very short time, large numbers of people will be called on to die to preserve it through another generation. As we speak, millions are dying because it hasn’t been preserved anywhere except in the office of John Paul II and Benedict XVI (with the exception of the teeming millions of new converts in the Third World, who are invisible because they are poor).  Heresy has led directly to the unprecedented holocaust of abortion, which has claimed a billion lives worldwide in just 40years; it kills millions more through starvation each year, because the Church is looking the other way at capitalist heresies like usury and hoarding of the means of production, which take food out of the mouths of the poor. Heresy is not just a lie, or even merely sacrilege in the sense that is tampering with a divine message, but can lead directly to death and injustice in this world, not just the next. It is also arrogance incarnate, for every heretic thinks that they know better than the Catholic Church without ever bothering to consult the 2,000 years of wisdom accumulated in the writings of their theologians and saints.
The primary purpose of the papacy is to act as ombudsman for humanity, who will point out all of these truths, regardless of the cost. None of the popes in recent memory has done this, including supposed “greats” like John Paul II. He might have been greatly popular across the planet, which is a problem, because it is bad “for you when all men speak well of you, for that is how their fathers treated the false prophets.” None of the recent popes have been heretics, but they have been exceptionally weak administrators. Perhaps they have additional considerations to take into account which the public, including myself, do not know about. Maybe they have been afraid to speak out for fear that the Apocalypse would happen on their watch and wanted to preserve a valid priesthood capable of granting valid confessions to the people of the world before they died like flies. Perhaps they have calculated that it would be better to have a valid priesthood in place which can supply the sacraments to the one out of every hundred Americans or Europeans who aren’t heretics, regardless of whether or not they taught evil things. On the face of it, however, it appears that they are being blackmailed with the threat of losing a lot of buildings and money if the Western bishops were to break away in an open schism. If so, then they have made a fatal miscalculation, because the innumerable secondary schools, nominally Catholic colleges and other such institutions are of little worth if they are not actually Catholic. We may be better off without them, if they all they accomplish to misrepresent what Catholicism is.
                What the world badly needs is a strong pope like Pius IX (1846-78) or Leo XIII (1878-1903) who tells it like it is, regardless of the consequences. These men were not crabby, but they were resolute in the midst of crises which seemed certain to wash away the Church altogether; more often than not, they made the world feel uncomfortable, rather than all warm and fuzzy on the inside. They directed their followers to get down to the difficult life-long chore of changing their characters in a very specific way. They knew that it was logically impossible to change the teachings of the Church, just as it is absurd to treat morality as a relative thing, for both are matters of discovery, like finding the right answer to an equation, not of invention or personal taste. A strong pope in the same mold would say things like this
 
·         The richer you are, the more likely you are to go to Hell, as St. Chrysostom and all of his fellow writers among the saints taught.
 
·         As the Catechism of the Catholic Church says, divorce is a mortal sin, regardless of whether or not it is followed by adultery through remarriage. It is a crime that represents treason against the family.
 
·         Torture is unacceptable, regardless of whether or not it is labeled “enhanced interrogation” or other such Orwellian label.
 
·         Homosexuality is itself a hate crime. All perversions of any kind are really just different forms of sex addiction, which involve a fascination with breaking taboos.
 
·         Abortion is cold-blooded, premeditated baby murder in each and every circumstance, as all of our ancestors believed until just a few decades ago.
 
·         Many of the individual teachings of capitalism are heretical, including the belief that employers can pay whatever wage or charge whatever price they can get away with, i.e. the prevailing wage or price. Nor can one licitly get rich gambling in the markets or by hoarding the means of production. These teachings go all the way back to the days of Moses.
 
·         Wearing a uniform does not give anyone a free pass into Heaven, including members of the armed forces. That depends on whether or not they live up the responsibilities implied by those uniforms, which may sometimes involve the unpopular duty to refuse illegal orders, such as to kill innocents in battle.
 
·         Contraception is a mortal sin that undermines society in many different ways. Population growth is good, not evil.
 
·         Class prejudice is a particularly vile sin. As Jesus said, “the love of money is a very great sin.” Furthermore, numerous passages in the Bible echo the opinion of Sirach 13:24, that “poverty is only evil in the sight of the ungodly.”
 
·         No one can receive interest for any reason, including the Vatican Bank. Nor is anyone obliged to pay interest on any loans they have agreed to, as many popes have stated in the past. Anyone who balks at this cannot receive Christian burial, as stated in Canon 25 of Lateran II.
 
·         Like the rich man in the parable of Lazarus, merely ignoring the needs of the poor is sufficient cause for eternal damnation, as Chrysostom said. This might also be true of those Westerners who see the pictures of starving children on television commercials, yet do nothing for them.
 
·         Every other religion is defective in some way. Authentic ecumenism does not imply watering down doctrines to suit the liking of other denominations and religions, but to explain clearly what they are, so that they can understand what they are accepting or rejecting. Proselytization is necessary, not something to be ashamed of.
 
·         It is mortally sinful to balk at any of these commandmnts, which come directly from the Magisterium, which is the Mind of Christ and spring from pure love of the victims they protect from injustice. Anyone who merely disbelieves them cannot take Eucharist without committing sacrilege.
 
I’m sure both the Left and Right of the political spectrum can find plenty to balk at in this list, which is favorable to neither of them. If you don’t like it, take it up with the Jewish carpenter who set down these laws, before he takes it up with you. The purpose of all this is not to be mean and crabby, but to prevent those who want to commit injustices against others from carrying out their crimes with a clear conscience, in which case their souls are also saved. Unfortunately, some people want to do them so badly that they will cast around until they find a convenient excuse. If the population of the West was actually Catholic, they would have no problem swearing an oath not to do them at every Mass, which the next pope could theoretically require. It might be a wise move to do precisely this until each one of these crimes are stamped out across the planet, or so that all of humanity clearly gets the message that God won’t tolerate them. Yet I sincerely doubt the next pope would even be able to reinstitute the relatively tame Oath Against Modernism which all priests serving between 1910 and 1967 had to swear at the beginning of their service, at least not without a major revolt. He could also instantly stamp out other rampant abuses by fiat, such as forbidding the American churches from handing out false annulments like candy; this practiced incensed the normally mild-mannered John Paul II to no end, since they are meant only for extreme situations like shotgun weddings, yet he did little about it. Sooner or later, some pope is going to have to perform the second set of tasks in his job description, which is to apply discipline to the rest of the clergy. The sooner it happens the better, because the longer such discipline is lacking, the tougher the final reckoning will be.
 
The Greatest Schism and the Next Peter
 
                There will come a showdown at some point in which the gigantic schism that has already occurred in the Church has to be brought out into the open. It will not be pleasant, but it will be healthy, in the same sense that vomiting is healthy when one has swallowed poison.[4] At some point, we will get a capable pope who will have the strength to tell the whole world exactly what Catholicism is in no uncertain terms, at which point most of the false Catholics who live in the West will publicly balk, thereby requiring public discipline. This includes most of the Western bishops, few of whom would approve of all the dogmas listed above,  and none of whom would applaud them loudly and publicly. They already voluntarily excommunicated themselves long ago, and a good pope would merely remind them of the explicit choice they have made through their own free will, addled by pride. They have succeeded in making the world forget that the papacy has the power to remove bishops at will, regardless of how badly they choose to misinterpret Vatican II. Pope Pius VII (1800-1823) once fired all the bishops of France, mainly for political reasons in his struggle against Napoleon, so tossing them out on their backsides for ingrained, arrogant defiance of Church teachings ought to be easy enough. When asked back in the 1990s what he would do if made pope, Malachi Martin didn’t hesitate to say that he’d simply fire one third of the bishops in America immediately. “Just be gone on Monday,” he said. Since then, the Church here has slid even further thanks to lack of discipline, so many more than that might have to be let go as unceremoniously as possible. To illustrate just how bad things are, I wrote a four-page letter detailing numerous serious abuses – including the clergy approving of abortion and priests balking at direct commands from the Vatican not to sell merchandise during Mass – to the best man we have in America, Cardinal Tim Dolan. He simply swept it all under the carpet with a couple of quick sentences saying this was merely a matter for my bishop and I to discuss. This was not only a clear example of how the conciliar heresy is practiced in America, but a continuation of the culture of buck-passing and whitewashing that made the pedophilia scandal possible. Another factor that made it possible was the clamor of the public itself for easy-going clerics who would not criticize adultery from the pulpit. They got what they asked for, in a faction of clergy who believed whole-heartedly that sex is no big deal, but money and power are very important. It was the rejection of Catholicism by the rank-and-file that made this possible. This is because the Catholic Church in America has never aimed at fostering a counter-culture of any kind; during the century between the Civil War and the 1960s, its main focus was on assimilating immigrants into America’s commercial culture, not teaching them to stand out from it. Throughout much of that time it has been a bastion of haughtiness; the American bishops were the ones who led a walkout at Vatican I (1868-1870), for example. One of the most loyal products of the American clergy, Archbishop Fulton Sheen, once said, “If you want your children to lose their faith, send them to Catholic school.” The reason for this is plain as day: they’re not Catholic. They’re designed to produce yuppies who won’t make waves as they nestle themselves as snugly as possible into the power structure and a bland suburban lifestyle, not rebels who will make heroic sacrifices for just causes. Our universities aren’t Catholic either, so we can cut them loose without much regret, if necessary. Until we can replace them with institutions that teach Catholic positions in every academic field, such as Christocentric history, Thomist psychology, the economic theory of distributism and the like, then they are merely obstructions.
                Millions of wayward Catholics are going to cling to such worldly trinkets when the Last Schism comes out into the open. This painful event will be a prelude to authentic growth, but it will be even more painful and the growth will be delayed the longer it takes for a strong pope to take the reins. One of the worst things that could possibly happen is the election of another muddling pope like those of recent memory who would maintain the appearance of false unity through their silence, by not sharing their orthodoxy with the rest of us or refusing to discipline their clergy. An even worse possibility is that someone from the wayward American branch of the Church would be elected, but this is thankfully unlikely, because cardinals have historically been chary of granting more influence to the great powers of the world in this way. America is a small and distant corner of a very large organization that thinks it has more importance than it actually does, thanks to its wealth and superpower status. It is entirely likely that at this conclave or another within the lifetimes of any readers, open warfare will erupt on sharp dividing lines: on one side will be heretics who mainly serve in the declining churches in the rich, white nations of the north of the planet, pitted against orthodox Catholics in the fast-growing churches in the poor, non-white nations of the south. Race, class and geography will likely intensify the split to the boiling point. Once a strong pope is finally elected, teeming millions of Westerners are likely to disobey him right off the bat, but will be even more likely to do so once they see is black or brown, especially once he starts canning their favorite clergy left and right. It is entirely possible that in the schism to come, the Western bishops will pull some kind of scam to contest the election and perhaps impose their own choice, in the form of an anti-pope who can change the teachings they despise precisely because he doesn’t enjoy papal infallibility. I’m praying to see a black or brown face elected at the next conclave, because whenever I see one in confession, I know they’re going to talk straight to me. I have met several from Kenya, every one of whom stood head and shoulders above their peers; they are not only the best black role models on the planet today, but among the few model Catholics. Of course, much of the hierarchy does not want to see black or brown faces in the papacy, precisely because they know that the jig might be up once one of them gets into office. So-called “liberals” and so-called “conservatives” both see this conclave as an opportunity to impose their own unorthodox agendas, but as I explained in Poxes from Both Houses: How the Liberal-Conservative Feud is Contributing to the Decline of Western Civilization, the real division is between orthodoxy and unfaithfulness. Both the Richelieu faction and the excessively lenient faction in the Western branches of the Church are cognizant of the fact that the real threat to their power comes from the fervent South, which is probably why they have been employing the usual sneaky machinations for months to see that it doesn’t happen. I planned to write on this subject long ago, once I heard the alarming news that the number of cardinals from the West was actually increased last year at the expense of the Third World nations where the Church is growing like wildfire, out of all proportion to their numerical strength or orthodox credentials.  For example, there were only 58 European electors at the last conclave in 2005, including 20 Italians, but now there are 61 and 28 respectively.[5] Given the sheer amount of blatant subterfuge carried out in the last few decades at the Vatican, under the noses of popes who felt helpless to stop the torrent, you can’t tell me honestly in the light of such news that political maneuvers began long ago to prevent a strong pope from emerging. Such machinations may succeed in preventing the appearance of a schism, but they only make the actual schism worse in the long run. We already lost America and Europe long ago because of laxity and they’re not going to be brought back by kowtowing and rewarding them for their insolence. At best, we will be able to salvage a minority of the parishioners in each region, who may have to travel far from home to find a valid Mass once their local churches break away. At least the remaining churches will have the important advantage of actually be Catholic, unlike most contemporary “maintenance parishes” where parishioners are only being maintained in their sins.
Sooner or later, tears are going to be shed, for the watershed moment when all of these things come to a head can only be avoided through intrigue for so long. We will shed fewer of them if we rip it off like a Band-Aid, rather than letting the rot progress into gangrene. It may become necessary to lop America and Europe off entirely like decomposing limbs before they infect the whole planet. If the corrosion is allowed to progress that far, then the eventual schism will be so painful that the whole world will feel it, regardless of their choice of religions. The Catholic Church is the largest and longest-lasting organization in world history, one representing a sixth of the world’s people, so if it is destabilized, the rest of the planet will go with it. After a process of elimination that has taken several millennia, the number of major religions left is now down to six: Catholicism and Islam, both of which claim a billion followers, plus a billion more Eastern Orthodox and Protestants, as well as a few hundred million Buddhists and Hindus. Much of the planet also follows Mammon, i.e. the de facto religion of the West’s commercial civilization. This winnowing process has not stopped, which begs the question of which one is going to be eliminated next. Because we’re living through The Falling Away predicted so long ago, as well as a post-Cold War political system Samuel P. Huntington has termed “The Clash of Civilizations,” it appears that Catholicism might next on the chopping block in that clash. Yet this would be against the whole trend of history for the last two thousand years, which hints that it will survive to the end of what amounts to a last-man-standing contest. Regardless of how foolishly the clergy manage the Church at this conclave or any other, or how many millions of lives and souls they doom because of their bad management, we have a divine guarantee which has been empirically vindicated by history: “You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” What we need is another Peter, a man eager to take the risk of being crucified upside down in order to give the world truth and justice. Once we have another pope like him, those gates will be opened wide, and they will fail.
 
 
The writer is a former journalist with a Bachelor’s in journalism and a Master’s in history from the State University of New York at Brockport, with a focus on American foreign policy and specializations in U.S.-Latin American relations and counterinsurgency history. He has worked as a paid foreign policy columnist for several newspapers and has credit towards a doctorate in Latin America history. He is a convert to Catholicism from atheism and has been an avid reader of textbooks on topics ranging from particle physics to psychology to economics since age 9.
 



[1] Luke 6:26.
 
[2] John 6:70.
 
[3] Pentin, Edward, 2013, “Theories Abound on Pope's 'Real Reasons' Behind Surprise Announcement,” published at the Newsmax website on Feb. 19, 2013. Available online at
 
[4] I am paraphrasing a brilliant comment in Chesterton, G.K., 1999, The Man Who was Thursday: A Nightmare. Project Gutenberg: U.S. Available from Project Gutenberg at http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1695
 
[5] Philip Pullella, Philip, 2013, “Pope May Change Conclave Rules Before Leaving: Vatican,” published Feb. 20, 2013 at Reuters.com. Available online at http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/20/us-pope-resignation-conclave-idUSBRE91J0NG20130220