Showing posts with label The Abomination of Desolation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Abomination of Desolation. Show all posts

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Update on Poggi Scandal in Italy: Accuser Arrested for Scandal

Edit: Fakin Akin has breathed a sigh of relief and along with Deacon Kandra and others creatures of the establishment are attacking Voris.

Of course, their credibility must be suffering somewhat in light of revelations like the following by Bishop Listeki of Milwaukee.

In a major turning point in its nearly 3-year-old bankruptcy, the Archdiocese of Milwaukee on Monday is scheduled to make public thousands of pages of documents detailing the sexual abuse of minors by priests going back decades, and what church leaders did — and did not do — in response. 
The records will contain parts of 42 priests' personnel files as well as depositions of former Archbishop Timothy Dolan, now cardinal of New York; retired Archbishop Rembert Weakland; retired Bishop Richard Sklba; and now-defrocked priest Daniel Budzynski. 
Most of the information, which is being released as part of an agreement in the archdiocese's bankruptcy proceedings, has never been seen publicly.

Too bad the Italian police can't come and arrest them for slander?

And what about the secret dossiers, the Vatican employed Monsignor Tommaso Stenico who was busted in a sting?

They're quick to attack the messenger and excuse the clergy, despite numerous published statements and valid stories, if not the Pope himself admitting there is a problem.

Here's the most recent.  Father Poggi, the defrocked whistleblower, has just been arrested, but does that mean his story is untrue?  Based on past history, it's not incredible to suppose it's possible.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Monks Celebrate Fifty Years of Bauhaus "Church"

Bauhaus' Cold Abstraction Only Leaves the Barest Outline of a Church
"When we enter ornate and clean Basilicas, adorned with crosses, sacred images, altars, and burning lamps, we most easily conceive devotion. But, on the other hand, when we enter the temples of the heretics, where there is nothing except a chair for preaching and a wooden table for making a meal, we feel ourselves to be entering a profane hall and not the house of God" - St. Robert Bellarmine

Edit: it was actually built before the Vatican Council, so you can't blame that.  In fact, the Abbey Church at St. John's Abbey in Collegeville Minnesota, was almost built in expectation of the catastrophic loss of confidence in the Catholic Church following the Vatican Council's publication.  The structure itself and the interior design are not only illustrative of the revolutionary values of the architect, Marcel Breuer, but it also signifies the utter lack of direction and mission at this Monastery.  St. John's Abbey is mercifully dying off.  It's no wonder, because the Abbey Church itself, whatever might be said of it in peer reviewed architecture textbooks, looks more like a tumulus for the ashes of deceased paupers, a kind of decrepit bus station ferrying the dead to the after life.  The building really does give the impression that a Catholic monastery has been hijacked by the U.N..  Indeed, Breuer also designed the UNESCO building.

Note the absence of Christ and palpable lack of focus
A few of the features of the building, not least of which is its cold and barren appearance, is the fact that the altar has been moved forward toward, if not into, the nave and there is no room for reredos or a tabernacle beneath the apse of the almost non-existent sanctuary, but there are blocky, industrial chairs for the presider and his/her acolytes to sit in majesty.  These chairs actually look almost like deck furniture for the Bill Shatner era Enterprise.

They're actually the same color too.


Contrasts are always helpful, especially when presented with such bland fare as this.  Where the gothic presents a soaring and brilliant interior, soaring heavenward as a compliment to the miracle of the Mass itself. St. John's Abbey presents a thoroughly utilitarian approach to the Liturgy, a kind of bus station outside of Leningrad circa 1956.
You know pretty well what's going on here. It's Gothic.

It is frequently the case that the contrasts presented by the historical changes taking place before the Council and after, give the impression of two different religions.  It's what many Catholic priests felt in the wake of the Protestant Revolt in England and many intelligent Catholics, like Micheal Davies, have noticed something like that in our own days.  Sometimes it's helpful to illustrate the right way to do something after you've criticized something:

Contrasts are nice

Monks of St. John's Abbey to celebrate 50th anniversary of dedication of Collegeville church | The Republic