Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Musclehead Bishop of Winona Canonizes Queen Elizabeth

Edit: it’s one thing to grieve her passing, have Masses said, but this is the kind of presumption you get from narcissistic personalities like Barron. Barron is the one who decides who is in Hell, nobody is there.

[Turd on Fire]  I was in Rome last week to give a presentation to the Pontifical Academy of the Sciences. Perhaps at a later date I will share some of what I taught and learned at that conference. I was supposed to go the following week with my Word on Fire team to England for a series of talks and events. But midway through the Roman part of the journey, word came to us that Queen Elizabeth II had died. We immediately made the decision to postpone the England trip to a later time. But I’ve been thinking a good deal about the Queen during these days, especially as I have taken in the marvelous pageantry around her funeral exercises. [Gays love pageantry?] I agree with the army of pundits and commentators who have praised Elizabeth for her steadfastness, devotion to duty, sangfroid [Wish I could say the same of you and Bergoglio] in the face of trials, and love of country. But I should like to draw special attention to a dimension of her life too often overlooked—namely, her unapologetically [Huh?] Christian faith. 

Perhaps it is not as well known today as it once was, but the monarch of Great Britain is not simply a political and cultural figure but clearly a religious one as well. [Like murdering monks and faithful Catholic bishops and faithful? The Protestant Monarchy has something in common with the Communists Bergoglio is constantly praising.] During Queen Elizabeth’s coronation ceremony in 1953, the new ruler was presented with scepter, orb, ring, and crown, each one of which was emblazoned with the cross, symbolizing Christ’s [More like Satan] lordship over the world. And though she was surrounded during that ceremony with the crown jewels, she received a Bible [Sodomitical KJV] which was described as follows: “the most valuable thing that this world affords.” The most sacred moment of the coronation was the anointing, during which Elizabeth, stripped of royal insignia and wearing only a simple white dress, was anointed with chrism by the Archbishop of Canterbury, who prayed that the Holy Spirit would set her apart for service. Of course, by means of this sacred ceremony, Elizabeth became, not simply head of state, but also head of the Church of England. Just days before her coronation, she made this moving request to everyone in the British Commonwealth: “I want to ask you all, whatever your religion may be, to pray for me on that day—to pray that God may give me wisdom and strength to carry out the solemn promises I shall be making, and that I may faithfully serve Him and you, all the days of my life.”


 AMDG 

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Barron's observations are as important as those guests who were on BBC all week to discuss the pomp, flare, and pageantry of the exequies; no value as to the One True Faith and its clear absence from the C. of E., he really should just keep his gob closed.

Private Masses for a non-Catholic, which includes a Protestant monarch, notwithstanding, the Novus Ordo prelate's chief concern is to Canonise every human being at the moment of death.

Anonymous said...

Idiotic observations as usual by pandering B Barron. As pointed out by e michael jones in an interview; QE II completely failed to protect her subjects from the moral degradation that has polluted family life in the UK since the end of WWII. Her own family is an example of the tragedy and pain that is always associated with sexual moral degradation and the loss of Christian discipline.

Anonymous said...

Pray for her Soul hopefully she's in Purgatory.
God bless -Andrew