No, thanks
What People are Commenting
donate Books CDs HOME updates search contact

Synodal Sister & Leo on Francis’ Path



Justice Keeper

Dear TIA,

Here is a synodal sister for you. Habit has gone, no more prayers, suffering or sacrifice. No.

Sr. Janet is a “justice circle keeper” in her prisoner ministry. It is a synodal encounter.

Catholic Sister brings synodal approach to prison through restorative justice

      G.G.
Catholic Sister brings synodal approach to
prison through restorative justice

Prison sisters

Sr. Janet Ryan, OSF, facilitates restorative “justice circle keeper” trainings for staff and incarcerated individuals inside prisons in the US state of ... Read more here.



______________________



Rebuilding Christendom


Dear Dr Horvat,

Salve Maria!

I hope that you had a blessed Feast of the Nativity of St John .

Thank you for the continued excellence of your writing on Tradition in Action which is some of the best counter-revolutionary commentary and analysis available. I also hope that your Fifth Biennial Event on the Feast of the Queenship of Our Lady went well. I was sorry not to be able to attend and am very much looking forward to seeing the pictures and report from the event.

I am writing to introduce you to my friend Mr. Austin Lambert. Mr. Lambert is the owner and founder of the new publishing house, Stabat Mater Press which reprints Catholic literature as well as publishing new traditionalist works.

Mr. Lambert is currently working on a book project tentatively titled: Rebuilding Christendom: Pillars of Catholic Order. The book will be a collection of essays by different authors on the essential pillars necessary for a coherent restoration of the Catholic City. I hope to be contributing one essay on Christian chivalry or possibly on Guild economy. When we were discussing ideas for these chapters I suggested the idea of a chapter on Courtesy, Civility and Customs.

I believe that this element of the Catholic restoration, though oft-neglected, is essential and that Dr Plinio's work on tendencies, ambiences and customs is outstanding on this topic. His schema on tendencies leading to ideas leading to facts is very important.

Mr Lambert agreed that your discussion with me on some of these topics in 2021 was highly illuminating and edifying. Mr. Lambert would like to discuss the possibility of requesting your contribution for his volume with you.

I am therefore very happy to introduce you both and am at your service if I can help your discussion any further.

     Yours in Christ the King,

     T.T.

______________________



Leo Continues Francis’ Path


My dear friends,

I wish every single Catholic could read this article (below)! Please not only read it but call others attention to it, won't you, please? This, I beg!

Every word challenges us with clarity, not to be deceived by these soft spoken words of Leo XIV, for truly, this spells out what a priest is not and what the Feast of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, is NOT.

May God help us all, myself included, to daily amend our lives and spend our lives in a more radically disciplined and dedicated way for Christ, before it's too late.

God bless,

     Ave Maria!

     E.Z. Ph.D.

The Flame They No Longer See

Ordained beneath the dome of St. Peter’s,
a new priesthood walks past the Sacred Heart without turning.


Chris Jackson

June 27, 2025 - On the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart, a feast once throbbing with images of reparation, sacrifice, and mystical union, Leo delivered a warm, tear-tinged pep talk. The occasion was the ordination of priests during the Jubilee of Priests. And yet what should have been a moment of gravity, awe, and sacred distinction was flattened into the predictable horizontality of the postconciliar gospel: unity, fraternity, accompaniment, inclusion. Love as therapy. The priest as wounded life coach.

The homily opened with the familiar gesture: “Before being shepherds, we are sheep.” Of course. The post-Vatican II Church recoils from the notion that a priest acts in persona Christi Capitis. The minister is not primarily a sacred man set apart, but a fellow pilgrim stumbling alongside us on the way to “healing.” Leo’s version of the Sacred Heart is not the consuming fire of divine charity but a kind of divine group hug: warm, emotive, and nonjudgmental.

The Priesthood as Psychodrama

The hallmark of Leo’s theology is what might be called emotional priesthood. Priests are told to enter “the vast and deep inner chamber” of memory, to feel consumed by mercy, and to offer a “great exchange of love.” He quotes Pope Francis approvingly: “the wounded side of Christ continues to pour forth that stream… to all those who wish to love as he did.” What does this mean concretely? There is no mention of sin as an offense against God. No mention of Hell. No “zeal for souls.” Only a vague hope that people will “come to know Christ” through kindness, hospitality, and interpersonal warmth.

And what of the priest’s role? He is no longer a soldier in the Church Militant. He is a reconciler of inner tensions, a psychological mediator tasked with harmonizing diverse “fragments” of people’s lives. In Leo’s words, the priest is called to be a “builder of unity and peace” by helping others “rise above immediate emotions” (a strange instruction from someone whose theology is governed almost entirely by emotion).

But the climax of absurdity is reached in the closing instruction to ordinands: “Give freely of your time… without reserve and without partiality, as the pierced side of the crucified Jesus teaches us to do.” The Sacred Heart is not treated as a symbol of divine justice and mercy, of sin redeemed through sacrifice, but as a vaguely inspirational metaphor for radical availability. A therapist-on-call with holy orders.

A Priesthood Without the Cross

The Sacred Heart of Jesus is, historically, a devotion rooted in expiation. Pius XI declared that it “demands from us a return of love, including acts of reparation for our ingratitude and infidelity.” But Leo XIV has inverted this. In his message to priests, he speaks of the Sacred Heart not as a font of justice or a call to reparation, but as a mystical couch for emotional healing. “In him,” he claims, “we learn to relate to one another in wholesome and happy ways.” This is a humanistic gospel, not the Catholic one.

Gone are the stern reminders of judgment. Gone is the need to suffer with Christ. Gone is the priest’s sacred duty to “offer the Holy Sacrifice for the living and the dead.” The Mass becomes a communal celebration of mutual care, where no one is left out; except, of course, the traditions of the Church.

We are being sentimentalized rather than sanctified.

Vatican II, Always Vatican II

In case anyone forgot which Council governs this pontificate, Leo XIV cites Lumen Gentium and Presbyterorum Ordinis multiple times, always selectively. There’s a passing nod to the Eucharist as the “source and summit” of the Christian life, but it serves only to reinforce the priest’s horizontal mission of social harmony. Even Augustine is weaponized for this end. “With you I am a Christian,” Leo quotes, without explaining that Augustine preached the necessity of discipline, doctrinal clarity, and spiritual warfare against heresy. He was not interested in therapeutic ministry. He was interested in truth and salvation.

But truth is not the currency of this pontificate. Sentiment is.

The Sacred Heart or the Synodal Heart?

This priestly Jubilee homily is the latest proof that Leo XIV, like his predecessor, is not offering Christ crucified. He is offering Christ synodal. A heart not pierced for sin but opened for feelings. A ministry not ordered toward Calvary but toward consensus. A sacrament not offered as sacrifice but as symbol of community.

It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the Novus Ordo priesthood is being repurposed into a global workforce of synodal facilitators; pastoral brokers of a gospel without dogma and a Church without combat. There is no call to confront error. No warning of judgment. No demand for sanctity. Just a soft, constant cooing: “Peace, peace,” when there is no peace.

Closing Benediction

Leo XIV exhorted his new priests not to be seduced by “models of success and prestige.” But the postconciliar Church is itself addicted to success, measured in applause, not sanctity. It trades the glorious wounds of Christ for the glowing reviews of modern man. It offers a priesthood without enemies, without martyrdom, without mission, because it no longer believes the world needs saving from sin.

The Sacred Heart still burns with love for souls. But the new rites, and the new shepherds, seem increasingly content to offer a gospel of pacification. The fire has been dimmed to a flicker. But it has not gone out. Not yet.


Posted July 1, 2025

Share

Blason de Charlemagne
Follow us










______________________


The opinions expressed in this section - What People Are Commenting - do not necessarily express those of TIA

Related Works of Interest


A_civility.gif - 33439 Bytes A_courtesy.gif - 29910 Bytes A_family.gif - 22354 Bytes