Editor's Note:
If you would like to
sign this statement, please
send us an email to
have your name added. We will be collecting signatures
until the 25th of April, at which time it will be
presented to Angelo Cardinal Amato, Prefect of the
Congregation for the Causes of Saints.
MJM
Feast of
St. Benedict
The
impending beatification
of Pope John Paul II on
May 1, 2011 has aroused
serious concern among
not a few Catholics
around the world, who
are concerned about the
condition of the Church
and the scandals that
have afflicted her in
recent years—scandals
that prompted the future
Benedict XVI to exclaim
on Good Friday 2005:
“How much filth there is
in the Church, even
among those who, in the
priesthood, should
belong entirely to Him.”
We give voice to our own
concern in this public
way in keeping with the
law of the Church, which
provides:
In accord with the
knowledge, competence
and preeminence which
they possess, the
Christian faithful have
the right and even at
times a duty to
manifest to the sacred
pastors their opinion on
matters which pertain to
the good of the Church,
and they have a right
to make their opinion
known to the other
Christian faithful,
with due regard for the
integrity of faith and
morals and reverence
towards their pastors,
and with consideration
for the common good and
the dignity of persons.
[CIC (1983), Can. 212, §
3.]
We are compelled by what
we believe in conscience
to be the common good of
the Church to express
our reservations
concerning this
beatification. We do so
on the following
grounds, among others
that could be brought
forth.
The Real Question
We stress at the outset
that we do not present
these considerations as
an argument against the
personal piety or
integrity of John Paul
II, which ought to be
presumed. The
question is not personal
piety or integrity as
such, but rather
whether there is,
objectively speaking, a
basis for the claim that
John Paul exhibited such
heroic virtue in the
exercise of his exalted
office as Pope that
he should be placed
immediately on the road
to sainthood as a Pope
to be emulated by all
his successors.
The Church has always
recognized that the
matter of heroic virtue
involved in a
beatification is
inextricably bound up
with whether the
candidate performed
heroically the duties
of his station in life.
As Pope Benedict XIV
(1675-1758) explained in
his teaching on
beatification, the
heroic performance of
duties involves acts so
difficult they are
“above the common
strength of man,” are
“accomplished promptly,
easily,” “with holy joy”
and “quite frequently,
when the occasion to do
so presents itself.”
[Cf. De servorum Dei
beatificatione, Bk.
III, chap. 21 in
Reginald
Garrigou-Lagrange,
The Three Ages of
Interior Life, Vol.
2, p. 443].
Suppose the father of a
large family were a
candidate for
beatification. One
would hardly expect his
cause to advance if it
were the case that,
while pious, he
consistently failed to
discipline and properly
form his children, who
habitually disobeyed him
and fomented disorder in
the home, even openly
opposing the Faith while
living under his roof;
or if, while attentive
to his prayers and
spiritual duties, he
neglected the
industrious support of
his family and allowed
his household to fall
into disarray.
When the candidate for
beatification is a
Pope—the Holy Father
of the universal
Church—the question is
not simply his
personal piety and
holiness, but also
his care of the vast
household of the Faith
that God has entrusted
to him, for which
purpose God grants the
Pope extraordinary
graces of state. This is
the real question: Did
John Paul II perform
heroically his
duties as Supreme
Pontiff in the manner of
the sainted predecessors
we will mention here:
opposing error, swiftly
and courageously
defending the flock from
the ravening wolves who
spread it, and
protecting the integrity
of the Church’s doctrine
and sacred worship? We
fear that under the
circumstances
surrounding this “fast
track” beatification the
real question has not
received the careful and
unhurried consideration
it deserves.
Undue Popular Pressure
Among
the circumstances that
concern us is the
unseemly pressure of
“popular demand” for
this beatification as
manifested by the slogan
“Santo Subito!”—“Saint
Immediately!” It
is precisely in order to
avoid the influence of
ephemeral popular
sentiment, and to allow
the perspective of a
sober historical
judgment to form, that
the law of the Church
wisely prescribes a
five-year waiting period
before a process for
beatification can even
begin. Yet in this case
that prudent waiting
period has been
dispensed with. Thus a
process that should
barely have commenced by
now is already nearly at
an end, as if to provide
immediate gratification
of the popular will,
even if that is not the
intention.
We are aware of the role
of popular acclamation
even in the canonization
of saints in exceptional
cases. Pope Saint
Gregory the Great, for
example, was canonized
by popular acclamation
almost immediately after
his death. But
that towering Roman
Pontiff was nothing less
than a builder of
Christian civilization,
laying down both
spiritual and
organizational
foundations for the
Church and Christendom
that endured for century
upon century.
Likewise, Pope Saint
Nicholas I, the last of
the Popes the Church has
denominated “Great,” was
instrumental in the
reform of the Church
during a great crisis of
faith and discipline,
afflicting especially
the upper hierarchy
whose corrupt members he
fearlessly opposed, and
is rightly regarded as a
veritable savior of
Christian civilization
at a time when its very
survival was in doubt.
Further, the popular
acclamation of beati
and saints belongs to a
time when the people
were overwhelmingly
faithful and submissive
to the Church. We
must ask: Of what value
is popular demand for
this beatification in an
epoch when the vast
majority of nominal
Catholics simply reject
any teaching on faith
and morals they deem
unacceptable—above all
the infallible teaching
of the Magisterium on
marriage and
procreation?
A Troubling Legacy
In all candor we are
constrained to observe
by way of comparison
that, given the
condition of the Church
as he left it, the
pontificate of John Paul
II objectively does not
warrant any role for
popular acclaim in his
beatification, much less
the immediate sainthood
for which the large
crowds have clamored. An
honest assessment of the
facts compels the
conclusion that John
Paul’s pontificate was
marked, not by the
renewal and restoration
we see during the
pontificates of his most
eminent predecessors,
but rather, as the
former Cardinal
Ratzinger so famously
remarked [Cf.
L’Osservatore Romano,
November 9, 1984], an
acceleration of the
“continuing process of
decay,” above all in the
traditionally Christian
Western nations of
Europe, the Americas,
and the Pacific.
This objective reality
is all the more apparent
when one considers that
the late Pope himself,
very near the end of his
pontificate, lamented
the “silent apostasy”
throughout a
once-Christian Europe.
[Cf. Ecclesia In
Europa (2003), n.
9.] Moreover, his
successor has since
publicly decried the
“process of
secularization” that
“has produced a grave
crisis of the sense of
the Christian faith and
of belonging to the
Church.” On this
occasion Pope Benedict
XVI announced the
creation of a new
pontifical council whose
specific task will be
“promoting a renewed
evangelization in
countries where the
first proclamation of
the faith already
resounded... but which
are going through a
progressive
secularization of
society and a sort of
‘eclipse of the sense of
God’...” [Cf. Vespers
Homily, June 28, 2010].
The permeation of the
human element of the
Church itself by this
“silent apostasy” has
become ever more evident
since the Second Vatican
Council. Before the
Council the world at
large was in precipitous
decline, as Pope after
Pope had warned, but
within the commonwealth
of the Church the faith
was still strong, the
liturgy was intact,
vocations were many, and
families were
large—until the great
conciliar “opening to
the world.”
Part of the diagnosis of
the sudden onset of a
post-conciliar ecclesial
crisis without parallel
was given by the
currently reigning Roman
Pontiff, writing as
Cardinal Ratzinger in
the very midst of the
27-year-long pontificate
of his predecessor: “I
am convinced that the
ecclesiastical crisis in
which we find ourselves
today depends in a great
part upon the collapse
of the liturgy...”
[La Mia Vita
(1997), p. 113: “Sono
convinto che la crisi
ecclesiale in cui oggi
ci troviamo dipende in
gran parte dal crollo
della liturgia...”]
It hardly needs to be
demonstrated that a
“collapse of the
liturgy” is something
the Church had
absolutely never
witnessed before Vatican
II and the “reforms”
undertaken in its name.
Only fifteen years after
the Council, during the
second year of his
pontificate, John Paul
II himself publicly
asked forgiveness for
the sudden and dramatic
loss of Eucharistic
faith and reverence
following the
“liturgical reforms”
approved by Paul VI:
I would like to ask
forgiveness—in my own
name and in the name of
all of you, venerable
and dear brothers in the
episcopate—for
everything which, for
whatever reason, through
whatever human weakness,
impatience or
negligence, and also
through the at times
partial, one-sided and
erroneous application of
the directives of the
Second Vatican Council,
may have caused
scandal and disturbance
concerning the
interpretation of the
doctrine and the
veneration due to this
great sacrament. And
I pray the Lord Jesus
that in the future we
may avoid in our manner
of dealing with this
sacred mystery anything
which could weaken or
disorient in any way the
sense of reverence and
love that exists in our
faithful people. [Dominicae
Cenae (1980), n.12]
But John Paul’s stunning
apology was never
followed by any decisive
action to stem the
continuing collapse of
the liturgy over the
next twenty-five years
of his reign. Quite the
contrary, in 1988, on
the twenty-fifth
anniversary of
Sacrosanctum Concilium,
the Pope hailed the
“reforms which it has
made possible” as “the
most visible fruit of
the whole work of the
Council,” noting that
for “many people the
message of the Second
Vatican Council has been
experienced principally
through the liturgical
reform.” Indeed it
has! Concerning
the self-evident
collapse of the liturgy,
however, the Pope merely
made note of various
abuses that occur “on
occasion,” while
insisting nonetheless
that “the vast majority
of the pastors and the
Christian people have
accepted the liturgical
reform in a spirit of
obedience and indeed
joyful fervour.” [Vicesimus
Quintus Annus
(1988), n. 12.]
Yet today the majority
of the Christian people
do not even believe in
the Real Presence of
Christ in the Holy
Eucharist, which they
receive in the hand from
the unconsecrated hands
of lay ministers as if
it were a mere wafer of
bread, which is exactly
how they treat it.
Moreover, in keeping
with a nearly universal
selective obedience to
the Magisterium, the
practice of
contraception is
widespread among
Catholics, whose view on
contraception differs
little from that of
Protestants, according
to innumerable polls and
surveys. This is also
evidenced by the
plummeting and now
abysmally low birthrates
among the Catholic
populations of the
Western world, which are
not even producing
enough children to
replace themselves.
Hence John Paul himself
noted “the widespread
fear of giving life to
new children” in the
midst of the “silent
apostasy” he decried in
Ecclesia in Europa.
In fact, it cannot be
disputed that the
highest rate of births
in the Catholic world is
seen among
“traditionalists” who do
not take part in the
reformed liturgy or who,
having no alternative,
endure it with anything
but “joyful fervor.”
Moreover, it is manifest
that John Paul
contributed to the
liturgical collapse by
his own acts. For the
first time in her
history the Church
witnessed during his
pontificate the
scandalous novelty of
“altar girls,”
concerning which the
Pope reversed his own
prior decision
forbidding the
innovation as
incompatible with
the bimillennial
tradition of the Church.
Then there were the
“inculturated” papal
liturgies incorporating
rock music and frankly
pagan elements,
including such shocking
spectacles as a
bare-breasted woman
reading the Epistles in
New Guinea, gyrating,
feathered Aztec dancers
shaking rattles and a
“purification rite” in
Mexico, and an
aboriginal “Smoking
Ceremony” replacing the
prescribed penitential
rite in Australia. The
excuse that the Pope
knew nothing of these
liturgical aberrations
beforehand is belied by
his own choice and
retention of their very
author and orchestrator:
Piero Marini, who served
as John Paul’s Master of
Pontifical Liturgical
Celebrations for nearly
twenty years, despite
worldwide protests
against his truly
grotesque abuses of the
Roman liturgy. Marini
was finally, and
mercifully, replaced by
Pope Benedict in 2007.
Honesty compels one to
admit that if the great
preconciliar Popes had
witnessed these papal
liturgies of John Paul
II, or indeed the
general state of the
Roman Rite throughout
his pontificate, they
would have reacted with
a mixture of outrage and
terrified incredulity.
But not only the liturgy
was in a state of
collapse by the end of
the last pontificate.
As we noted at the
beginning of this
Statement, on Good
Friday 2005, just before
ascending to the Chair
of Peter himself, the
former Cardinal
Ratzinger remarked: “How
much filth there is in
the Church, even among
those who, in the
priesthood, should
belong entirely to Him.”
[Cf. “Homily for Good
Friday Mass,” 2005].
The “filth” to which the
Cardinal referred was of
course an unbelievable
number of sexual
scandals involving
unspeakable acts by
Catholic priests,
erupting in nations
around the globe—the
harvest of decades of
“conciliar renewal” in
the seminaries.
Instead
of disciplining the
bishops who fostered
this filth in their
seminaries, covered it
up by moving sexual
predators from place to
place, and then
bankrupted their
dioceses by paying civil
settlements, John Paul
II provided safe haven
for several of the most
egregiously negligent
prelates. Perhaps the
most notable example is
Cardinal Bernard Law
(see photo). Forced to
testify before a grand
jury concerning his
gross negligence in
failing to address
rampant homosexual
predation of young boys
by priests in the
Archdiocese of Boston,
which resulted in $100
million in civil
settlements to more than
500 victims, Law’s
“punishment” by the
Pope, after his
disgraced resignation as
Archbishop, was to be
brought to Rome and
awarded one of the
city’s four magnificent
patriarchal basilicas
over which to preside as
Archpriest.
And what of Archbishop
Weakland, the notorious
theological dissenter
who admitted in a
deposition that he
deliberately returned
homosexual predators in
the Archdiocese of
Milwaukee to active
priestly ministry
without warning
parishioners or
notifying the police of
their crimes?
Having driven the
Archdiocese into
bankruptcy court on
account of the resulting
civil suits, Weakland
ended his long career of
undermining the
integrity of faith and
morals—to worldwide
fawning publicity—only
after the revelation
that he misappropriated
$450,000 in archdiocesan
funds to pay off a man
with whom he had had a
homosexual affair. John
Paul II allowed this
thieving wolf of a
bishop to retire with
the full dignity of his
high office in the
Church, after which a
Protestant publishing
company published his
memoirs: “A Pilgrim in a
Pilgrim Church: Memoirs
of a Catholic
Archbishop.” An admiring
reviewer writes that the
book “portrays a man
imbued with the values
of the Second Vatican
Council [who] had the
courage to carry them
forward both as
Benedictine Abbot
Primate and as
Archbishop of
Milwaukee.”
The
“filth” that afflicted
the Church during the
last pontificate
includes the long
history of sexual
predation by Fr. Marcial
Maciel Degollado (being
blessed by Pope John
Paul in photo to the
left), founder of the
“Legionaries of Christ,”
supposedly the very
exemplar of the
“renewal” in action.
John Paul II refused to
initiate any
investigation into
Maciel’s conduct despite
mounting evidence of
abominable crimes which,
thanks to worldwide
publicity, are now the
most notorious ever
committed by a Catholic
cleric. Paying no heed
to the long-pending and
widely known canonical
charges against Maciel
by eight of the
Legionary seminarians he
had sexually molested,
John Paul lavishly
honored him in a public
ceremony at the Vatican
in November 2004. Days
later, however, then
Cardinal Ratzinger “took
it on himself to
authorize an
investigation of
Maciel.” [Jason Berry,
“Money Paved the Way for
Maciel’s Influence in
the Vatican,”
National Catholic
Reporter, April 6,
2010].
It was literally the
case that John Paul had
to die before Maciel
could be disciplined. He
was finally removed from
active ministry and
exiled to a monastery
almost immediately after
Cardinal Ratzinger
became Pope Benedict.
But this was only part
of a pattern described
by a prominent Catholic
commentator: “[T]he
high-flying John Paul
let scandals spread
beneath his feet, and
the uncharismatic
Ratzinger was left to
clean them up.
This pattern extends to
other fraught issues
that the last Pope
tended to avoid—the
debasement of the
Catholic liturgy, or the
rise of Islam in a
once-Christian Europe.”
[Ross Douthat, “The
Better Pope,” New
York Times, April
11, 2010].
Another reason for
reservation concerning
this beatification is
that throughout John
Paul’s long pontificate
faithful Catholics were
bewildered and
scandalized by numerous
manifestly imprudent
papal statements and
gestures the likes of
which the Church has
never witnessed in 2000
years. To recall just a
few of the more
well-known examples:
·
The numerous
theologically dubious
apologies for the
presumed sins of
Catholics in prior
epochs of Church
history.
Of course the world did
not view the Pope’s
unprecedented mea
culpas as a great
demonstration of the
Church’s humility.
Rather, quite
predictably, they were
construed as admissions
of the Church’s historic
guilt for all manner of
offenses against
humanity. With the
exception of the
apparently forgotten
apology in Dominicae
Cenae, however,
there were no apologies
for the catastrophic
failure of living
members of the hierarchy
to preserve faith and
discipline in the midst
of the “continuing
process of decay” and
“silent apostasy.”
·
The Assisi gatherings of
October 1986 and January
2002.
During
Assisi 2002, John Paul
provided places in the
very Convent of Saint
Francis for the
practitioners of “the
great world religions,”
from Animism to
Zoroastrianism, to enact
their assorted cultic
rituals in that sacred
Catholic shrine.
Referring with emphasis
to “the arranged
places,” the Pope
declared to a motley
assembly that included
practitioners of Voodoo:
“we will pray in
different ways,
respecting one another’s
religious traditions.”
[Cf. “Address Of His
Holiness Pope John Paul
II to the
Representatives of the
World Religions,”
January 24, 2002, and
List of Participants,
vatican.va].
The inevitable public
impression left by the
Assisi event, especially
when filtered through
the prism of the secular
media, was that all
religions are more or
less pleasing to God—the
very thesis rejected as
false by Pope Pius XI in
his 1928 Encyclical
Mortalium Animos.
Why else would the Pope
have summoned all their
“representatives” to
Assisi to offer their
“prayers for peace”?
Can it honestly be
denied that every single
one of the Pope’s
preconciliar
predecessors would have
condemned these
spectacles?
·
The Pope’s public
kissing of the Koran
during the 1999 visit to
Rome of a group of Iraqi
Christians and Muslims.
The Chaldean-rite
Catholic Patriarch of
Iraq hailed this act as
a “gesture of respect”
for a religion whose
essence is a denial of
the Trinity and the
divinity of Christ and
whose entire history is
marked by the
persecution of
Christians, as we see at
this very moment in Iraq
and the Islamic
“republics” of the
Arabic world.
·
The astonishing
exclamation of March 21,
2000 in the Holy Land:
“May St. John the
Baptist protect Islam
and all the people of
Jordan...” [Cf. “Papal
Homily in the Holy
Land,” vatican.va].
What possible
explanation could there
be for this
unprecedented prayer for
the protection of a
false religion itself
(as distinct from its
followers as human
persons) during a papal
sermon in the Holy Land
– the very place
liberated from Islam
during the First
Crusade?
·
The bestowal of pectoral
crosses – symbols of
episcopal authority – on
George Carey and Rowan
Williams.
These Anglican so-called
Archbishops of
Canterbury, the validity
of whose priestly and
episcopal ordinations
was definitively ruled
out by Pope Leo XIII’s
1896 Bull Apostolicae
Curae, do not even
adhere to the teaching
of the Catholic Church
on matters of basic
morality rooted in the
divine and natural law.
[Cf. John Allen, “Papal
Deeds Speak Louder,”
National Catholic
Register, November
8, 2002]
·
Pope John Paul’s active
participation in pagan
worship at a “sacred
forest” in Togo.
The Pope’s own newspaper
reported how, upon his
arrival at this place,
“a sorcerer began to
invoke the spirits: ‘Power
of water, I invoke you.
Ancestors, I invoke you.’”
Following this
invocation of “spirits,”
the Pope was presented
“with a receptacle full
of water and flour. [He]
first made a slight bow
and then dispersed the
mixture in all
directions. In the
morning he had performed
the same action before
Mass. That pagan rite
[!] signifies that he
who receives the water,
symbol of prosperity,
shares it with his
ancestors by throwing it
on the ground.” [L’Osservatore
Romano, Italian
edn., August 11, 1985,
p. 5].
Shortly after his return
to Rome, the Pope
expressed satisfaction
with his public
participation in the
prayer and ritual of
animists: “The prayer
meeting in the sanctuary
at Lake Togo was
particularly striking.
There I prayed for
the first time with
animists.” [La
Croix, August 23,
1985]. One would think
that even this one
instance—not only
unrepented, but publicly
vaunted—should be
sufficient reason for
terminating the cause
for John Paul’s
canonization. For by the
Pope’s own admission, he
“prayed . . . with
animists.” And that kind
of action – direct and
formal participation in
pagan worship – is
something the Church has
always judged to be
objectively gravely
sinful. As the
Catechism of the
Catholic Church
teaches, pagan idolatry
occurs not only when man
worships false gods or
idols as such, but also
when he “honors and
reveres a creature in
place of God, whether
this be gods or demons
(for example, satanism),
power, pleasure, race,
ancestors...
Idolatry rejects the
unique Lordship of God;
it is therefore
incompatible with
communion with God.”
[CCC § 2113].
But this was only the
most egregious
(arguably) of many
similar incidents during
John Paul’s pontificate.
It is instructive to
note the Church’s
posthumous verdict on
the 4th-century
Pope, Liberius, the
first Bishop of Rome
not to be declared a
saint. Liberius earned
this dubious distinction
because—while in exile
and under great duress
from a persecuting
emperor—he endorsed an
ambiguous doctrinal
statement favorable to
Arianism and then
excommunicated
Athanasius, the champion
of Trinitarian
orthodoxy. Even though
after his liberation and
return to Rome he
promptly retracted these
lamentable actions and
once again upheld
orthodoxy for the rest
of his pontificate, he
was still denied
canonization.
·
The “ecumenical” vespers
service in Saint Peter’s
Basilica, the very heart
of the visible Church,
in which the Pope
consented to pray
together with Lutheran
“bishops”, including
women claiming to be
successors of the
Apostles.
This spectacle of course
invited questions about
whether the Pope was
undermining his own
teaching against women’s
ordination. [Cf. Allen,
loc. cit.]
In sum, by any objective
assessment of the facts,
John Paul II presided
over and left behind a
Church that remained in
a state of crisis
following the turmoil
that erupted immediately
after Vatican Council
II. It is true that his
pontificate included
some decidedly positive
achievements, including
an admirable and
forthright defense of
human life in the face
of the growing “culture
of death,” valuable
teaching in several
weighty social
encyclicals, an
infallible pronouncement
against any possibility
of women’s ordination,
and the motu proprio (Ecclesia
Dei) that at least
set the stage for the
“liberation” of the
traditional Latin Mass
by Pope Benedict. Nor do
we mean to question the
personal piety and
prayerfulness that were
evident to those who
knew him, and which we
acknowledged at
the beginning of this
Statement.
Nevertheless, it can
scarcely be denied that
every one of John Paul’s
predecessors would have
been shocked and
dismayed by the
disastrously widespread
disobedience, doctrinal
dissent, liturgical
decay, moral scandals,
and declining Mass
attendance that
continued to the end of
his pontificate – all
exacerbated by
frequently poor
episcopal appointments
and the sorts of highly
questionable papal words
and deeds we have
recalled above. Even the
reformist Paul VI, whose
own ecumenical and
interreligious
initiatives were far
more cautious than those
of John Paul, would have
been appalled by the
state of the Church at
the end of John Paul’s
long reign. And it
was Pope Paul himself
who described the
already-developing
postconciliar debacle
with some of the most
shocking words ever
uttered by a Roman
Pontiff:
By
some fissure the smoke
of Satan has entered
into the temple of God:
there is doubt,
uncertainty, problems,
unrest. Doubt has
entered our consciences,
and it has entered
through the windows
which were meant to have
been opened to the light.
This state of
uncertainty reigns even
in the Church. It was
hoped that after the
Council there would be a
day of sunlight in the
history of the Church.
Instead, there came a
day of clouds, of
darkness, of groping, of
uncertainty. How did
this happen? We will
confide Our thoughts to
you: there has been
interference from an
adverse power: his
name is the devil...
[Paul VI,
Insegnamenti, Ed.
Vaticana, Vol. X, 1972,
p. 707]
Like John Paul after
him, however, Paul
failed to take any
effective measures to
address a debacle that
the Pope—and only the
Pope—could have
prevented, or at least
greatly curtailed.
Pope Paul’s devastating
admissions were quoted
by no less than Msgr.
Guido Pozzo, Secretary
of the Pontifical
Commission “Ecclesia
Dei,” in his address to
the European priests of
the Fraternity of St.
Peter on July 2, 2010 at
Wigratzbad. As
Msgr. Pozzo admitted on
that occasion:
“Unfortunately, the
effects as enumerated by
Paul VI have not
disappeared. A
foreign way of thinking
has entered into the
Catholic world,
stirring up confusion,
seducing many souls,
and disorienting the
faithful. There is a
‘spirit of
self-demolition’ that
pervades modernism...”
The post-conciliar
crisis, he observed,
involves a
“para-Conciliar
ideology” that “proposes
once more the idea of
Modernism, condemned
at the beginning of the
20th century by St. Pius
X.”
But who,
if not the last Pope—and
the one before him—bears
partial responsibility
for the spread of this
para-Conciliar,
heterodox ideology
throughout the Catholic
world? Certainly, John
Paul II, like Paul VI,
promulgated a number of
doctrinally traditional
magisterial documents
that were directed
against such heterodoxy.
But the question before
us now is this: Was his
witness strong enough,
and consistent enough,
to qualify him as an
heroic defender of
orthodox faith and
morals? Or rather, did
his own many
questionable novelties
in word and deed -
together with his
omissions and his lack
of firm ecclesiastical
governance - have the
overall effect of taking
away with his left hand
much of what he gave
with his right?
In this connection we
note the supreme irony
that while a resurgent
Modernist heresy was
causing chaos throughout
the Church, John Paul II
saw fit to announce
personally the
excommunication of only
five persons during his
twenty-seven years as
Pope: the late
Archbishop Marcel
Lefebvre and the four
bishops he consecrated
in 1988 for the Society
of Saint Pius X, whose
very aim (whether or not
one agrees with their
approach) was precisely
to oppose the
“para-Conciliar
ideology” remarked by
Msgr. Pozzo according to
the program of the
sainted Pope for whom
their association is
named. (Note: John Paul
did not personally
announce the
excommunication of Tissa
Balasuriya, who at any
rate was
“unexcommunicated”
within a year.)
As the whole world
knows, in early 2009
Pope Benedict revoked
the excommunications of
the four Society
bishops. He has
since observed that
“[f]rom the moment in
which these four bishops
recognized the Primacy
of the Pope, juridically
they had to be liberated
from excommunication...”
[Luce del Mondo,
p. 43] But they
always
had recognized
the papal primacy,
unlike the legions of
Catholics—laity,
priests, nuns,
theologians, and even
certain bishops—who
effectively negated it
with their open dissent
from the most basic
teachings of the
Magisterium, while the
Vatican did nothing or
next to nothing for more
than a quarter-century.
Likewise, the
ill-starred Paul VI, in
the midst of the
mounting
“self-demolition” of the
Church he himself
decried, reserved his
harshest discipline for
the Society and
Archbishop Lefebvre,
whom he publicly rebuked
by name and then ordered
suspended from the
exercise of Holy Orders
while theological and
liturgical rebels were
sacking the Church with
impunity all over the
world.
Today very few seriously
propose the
beatification of Paul
VI, who rued the debacle
over which he presided
while not doing nearly
enough about it. In
fact, there was no
process for Pope Paul’s
beatification at all
until John Paul II
commenced it at the
diocesan level in 1993.
It has not advanced
since then, having
apparently been stopped
cold by grave objections
not unlike some of those
suggested here.
And so we must ask: Why
the rush to beatify John
Paul II, given that he
persevered unswervingly
in the imprudent
reformist program of his
predecessor, adding to
it a long series of
novelties not even Pope
Paul, that supremely
tragic figure, would
have dared to venture?
At least Paul had the
candor to admit that he
saw the smoke of Satan
entering the Church, not
a “new springtime of
Christian life which
will be revealed by the
Great Jubilee, if
Christians are docile to
the action of the Holy
Spirit.” [Tertio
Millennio Adveniente
(1994), n. 18]
For the sake of truth we
must be frank in stating
the obvious conclusion:
No blessed or sainted
Pope in Church history
has a legacy as
troubling as that of
John Paul II, and
perhaps no Pope at all
aside from Paul VI.
A Miracle Open to Doubt
Finally,
we cannot fail to note
that the
lone
miracle
on which the entire
beatification is
premised—the reported
cure of a French nun,
Sister Marie
Simon-Pierre
(see photo), said to be
suffering from
Parkinson’s disease—is
open to question.
For one thing, the very
diagnosis of Parkinson’s
leaves room for doubt
absent the only
definitive test known to
medical science: an
autopsy of the brain.
Other conditions subject
to spontaneous remission
can mimic Parkinson’s.
For another, the nexus
between the purported
cure of the nun and a
“night of prayers to
John Paul II” seems
dubious. Did the
prayers for this nun
exclude the invocation
of any and all
recognized saints?
Compare the two
miracles—it was John
Paul himself who reduced
the requirement to only
one—that Pius XII deemed
sufficient for the
beatification of Pius X.
The first involved a nun
who had
bone cancer
and was cured
instantaneously after a
relic of Pius X was
placed on her chest. The
second involved a nun
whose cancer disappeared
when she touched a relic
statue of Pius. No such
indisputable connection
exists between the
purported cure in this
case and any putative
relic of John Paul II.
There is no question
here of the infallible
teaching authority of
the Church; the
assessment of this lone
miracle is a judgment of
medical fact subject to
the possibility of
error. Imagine the
damage to the Church’s
credibility should this
nun eventually suffer a
return of her symptoms.
In fact, in March of
last year the
Rzeczpospolita
daily, one of Poland’s
most respected
newspapers, reported
that there had been some
return of symptoms and
that one of the two
medical consultants had
expressed doubts about
the purported miracle.
This report prompted the
former head of the
Congregation for the
Causes of Saints,
Cardinal Jose Saraiva
Martins, to reveal to
press that “It could be
that one of the two
medical consultants
perhaps had some doubts.
And this, unfortunately,
leaked out.” Martins
further revealed that “the
doubts would require
further investigation.
In such cases, he said,
the Congregation would
ask more doctors to
come in and offer an
opinion.” [Nicole
Winfield, Associated
Press, “John Paul II
‘Miracle’ Further
Scrutinized,” March 28,
2010]
One doctor doubted the
miracle, and when his
doubts “leaked out”
unexpectedly other
doctors were brought
in—and this less than a
year ago! Have we really
been presented with the
kind of indubitably
miraculous cures
recognized by Pius XII
in the beatification of
Pius X?
The Probable
Consequences of this Act
Again, the real question
concerning this
beatification is not
whether John Paul II was
a good or holy man, but
rather what his
beatification would
signify to the masses
that will pay no heed to
the distinction between
beatification and
canonization. It would
signify that the Church
views as a saint, and
even great among Roman
Pontiffs, a Pope whose
stewardship of the
Church cannot withstand
the least comparison
with the examples of his
sainted and blessed
predecessors.
Consider the
next-to-last of the
sainted Roman Pontiffs:
St. Pius V, a model of
fortitude in his reform
of the clergy according
to the decrees of the
Council of Trent, his
stern measures against
the spread of error in
the Church, and his
defense of all of
Christendom against the
threat of Islam—which
John Paul II implored
Saint John the Baptist
to protect! Consider
also the last Pope to be
raised to the altars:
St. Pius X, likewise
remembered for his
courageous governance of
the Church in
suppressing precisely
that Modernist heresy
which erupted anew after
Vatican II and spread
throughout the Catholic
world during John Paul’s
pontificate, as Msgr.
Pozzo so candidly
observed only a few
months ago (but without
seeming to consider any
responsibility of the
head of the Church for
this catastrophe).
Does not this
beatification,
therefore, incur the
risk of reducing
beatification and even
canonization to the
level of a token of
popular esteem bestowed
upon a beloved figure in
the Church, a kind of
ecclesiastical Academy
Award? Here we note
that, in one of his many
innovations, John Paul
“streamlined” the
process for both
beatification and
canonization, allowing
him to conduct an
incredible 1,338
beatifications and 482
canonizations—more than
all of his
predecessors combined.
Is it prudent for
the very Pope who put
this “saint factory”
into operation (a
development widely
belittled in the press)
to be judged according
to its relaxed
standards?
We must also express our
deep concern over the
predictable exploitation
of this beatification by
the cunning forces of
world opinion. We notice
that they are observing
a curious silence where
one would expect
clamorous opposition if
this beatification
really represented an
offense to the
prevailing liberal
zeitgeist—as does the
proposed beatification
of Pius XII, which has
been met with a
relentless publicity
campaign to stop it at
all costs. It would
appear that world
opinion views the
beatification of John
Paul II with favor
insofar as it would
serve to validate the
“reforms of Vatican II”
the world has hailed as
a long overdue
accommodation of a
hidebound Church to the
“modern world” of
“liberty” and “human
rights.”
Yet we can be certain,
should the beatification
proceed as scheduled,
that powerful sectors of
the mass media will not
waste a moment in
holding it up as an
example of the Church’s
“hypocrisy,” ineptitude
and cronyism in so
honoring the Pope who
presided over the
pedophilia scandal and
refused to discipline
the evil founder of the
Legionaries. On the
latter subject there is
already a book-length
exposé and film: “Vows
of Silence: The Abuse of
Power in the Papacy of
John Paul II,” which
documents how Maciel was
protected by the Pope’s
key advisors, including
Cardinal Sodano, Vatican
Secretary of State,
Cardinal Martínez,
Prefect of the
Congregation for
Institutes of
Consecrated Life and
Societies of Apostolic
Life, and Cardinal
Dziwisz, now Archbishop
of Cracow, who was John
Paul’s secretary and
closest confidant.
Conclusion
In the midst of what
Sister Lucia of Fatima
rightly called
“diabolical
disorientation” in the
Church we are especially
mindful that
beatification is not at
all within the charism
of infallibility. It
does not establish an
obligatory cult but
merely permission to
venerate the beatus
if one wishes. In this
case, therefore, we face
the real possibility of
a grave error in
prudential judgment
provoked by contingent
circumstances, including
popularity and
affection, that ought
not to influence the
essential process of
careful investigation
and
deliberation—especially
in the case of this
beatification, with all
its implications for the
universal Church.
Again we ask: Why the
haste? Is there
perhaps a fear that
unless the act is
performed immediately
the more mature verdict
of history might
preclude beatification,
as it surely did in the
case of Paul VI?
If so, why not let the
verdict be rendered in
keeping with the long
view the Church has
generally taken in the
matter of beatification
or canonization?
If even a giant like
Saint Pius V was not
canonized until 140
years after his death,
can we not wait at least
a few more years in
order to assess the
pontifical legacy that
ought to figure most
prominently in the
decision to beatify John
Paul II? Can the Church
not wait even the 37
years that elapsed
between the death of
Pius X and his
beatification by Pius
XII in 1951 (followed by
the canonization of
1954)? Indeed, is it
prudent to beatify
now—without further
assessment and on the
basis of a lone miracle
whose authenticity is
open to doubt—a Pope
whose legacy is
admittedly marked by
the rampant spread of
the very evil St. Pius X
heroically opposed and
defeated in his time?
For all of these
reasons, we believe it
is just and appropriate
to implore the Holy
Father to defer the
beatification of John
Paul II to a time when
the grounds for that
solemn act may be
assessed objectively and
dispassionately in the
light of history. The
good of the Church can
only be served by a
prudent delay, whereas
it can only be placed at
risk by a hasty process
not protected from error
by the charism of the
Church’s infallible
Magisterium.
Our Lady, Queen of
Wisdom, Virgo
Prudentissima, pray
for us!
If you would like to
sign this statement,
please
send us an email to
have your name added.
Michael J. Matt
Editor/Publisher, The
Remnant
USA
Rod Pead
Editor, Christian
Order
UK
John Vennari
Editor, Catholic
Family News
USA
Gary Scarrabelotti
Editor, Oriens
Journal of the Oriens
Foundation Inc.
Australia
Anthony S Fraser
Editor,
Apropos.
Scotland
Arnaud de Lassus
AFS, Versailles,
France
Christopher J. Paulitz
Contributor, Rorate
Caeli
USA
Erik
van Goor
Editor/Publisher
Catholica magazine
The
Netherlands
Michael Buszewski
"Pro Fide
Rege et Lege" co-editor
Warsaw,
Poland
Richard Aleman
President
The
Society for Distributism
Mornac
Contributor, Rorate
Caeli
Dr Stephen McInerney
Academic
Sydney, Australia
Christopher A. Ferrara,
JD
American Catholic
Lawyers Association,
Inc.
USA
James Bogle Esq MA TD
Barrister of the Middle
Temple, London
UK
John Rao, Ph.D. Oxford
St. John’s University,
New York
USA
Brian M. McCall
Associate Professor
University of Oklahoma
College of Law
USA
Fr. Brian W.
Harrison, O.S., M.A.,
S.T.D.
Associate Professor
(Emeritus) of Theology,
Pontifical Catholic
University of Puerto
Rico
USA
Fr Thomas Crean OP, MA
(Oxon.), STL
Tutor in Pastoral
Theology, Maryvale
Institute, Birmingham
United Kingdom
R. J. Stove
Writer
Melbourne, Australia
Timothy J. Cullen
Columnist, The Remnant
Argentina
John F. Salza, Esq.
Catholic Author and
Apologist
USA
Edwin C. Faust
Catholic
Journalist
USA
Kenneth J. Wolfe
Catholic Writer
Washington, D.C.
Trond Urestad
Norway
Commander Sir CJMJ
Wolfram Benedikt, USN
(Ret), KHS, OOSB, MI,
CNOUS, MA, ICO
Knight of the Equestrian
Order of the Holy
Sepulcher of Jerusalem
Germany
David L. Sonnier
LTC (Retired), US ARMY
Kathleen Brady
Shramore, Roundwood
Republic of Ireland
Dr. Peter D. Wimberley,
M.D.
Medical Doctor
Denmark
Michal Semin
St. Joseph Institute,
Director
Czech Republic
Paul Bailes BSc PhD
University Professor
Australia
Dr. Rory Donnellan
Pathologist
Immaculata Pathology
Queensland, Australia
Laurie Myers
Christian Activist
Sydney, Australia
Frank Rega
Catholic Author
USA
Capt. Thomas J. Ryan
Remnant contributor
OHIO
Rodney Ham
Kent,
United Kingdom
Mortimer J. Howard
Major USMC Retired
James Bendell, Esq.
Litigation Counsel,
American Catholic
Lawyers Association
USA
Scott Jones
Our Lady of Victory Home
Study, Lepanto Press,
Director
USA
Dr. Charles P. Marino
Research Chemist
Philadelphia, PA
William J. Dowling
Attorney at Law
New York, NY
Francesco Neri BTh, LLB
Legal Counsel
Melbourne, Australia
Theodore D. Vicknair,
Sr.
Attorney at Law
USA
Dr. Robert P. Banaugh
Retired Academic
USA
Dr Bogomir M Kuhar,
PharmD, RPh, FASCP
Clinical Pharmacist
Specialist
Founder, Catholic
Pharmaceutical Society
Founder, Pharmacists For
Life International
Joseph Bracewell
Lancashire England
Steven
Mentele MSEE
Purdue University
Donatus Justin
Academic
Malaysia
Kevin
Dias BCL, LLB
Legal
Counsel
Canada
Camilo Araya Guerra
Santiago, Chile
Anthony Sciriha
B' Kara
Malta,
Europe
Jeremiah Belocura
Ave Maria
University, Class of
2010
Music Director for the
EF Mass, San Juan
Bautista Parish, El
Paso, Texas
Dennis Cunningham
Melbourne, Australia
Therese Nally
Brisbane,
Australia
Timotej H. Neubauer
Political Scientist and
Translator
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Roberto Hope
Monterrey, Mexico
Father
Brendan King SSPX
Preston,
England
Joreen Siena R. Belocura
J.D.
Candidate, May 2012
Ave Maria
School of Law
Ave Maria
University '08
William Devine
Preston,
England
Anxo
Sampedro
España
James Watt
Edinburgh, Scotland
Nathan
B. Allen
Captain,
US Army
USA
Juan
Manuel Soria Acuña
Lawyer
Argentina
A. Todd Wilson, Esq.
Lt. Cmdr., USNR (Ret.)
Grand Knight, KofC
Woodlawn Council 2161
Pennsylvania, USA
Paula
Aguirre Moltedo
Hijuelas,
Chile
David V. Selby MBA, ME,
BSc,
Civil
Engineer
New
Zealand
Mary W. Selby LL.M.
Barrister
and Solicitor
New
Zealand
Mary Antonia Selby
Student
New
Zealand
Silvester Donald McLean
Publisher
of the English edition
of "Peter, Lovest Thou
Me?"
Bunyip, Australia
Arata
Nunobe
Tokyo,
Japan
Donald
J. Hagler
Professor
of Pediatrics
Divisions
of Pediatric Cardiology
and Cardiovascular
Diseases
Mayo
Clinic College of
Medicine
Dr.
Patrick Saull
Ottawa,
Canada
Edward J.
Kardas, Ph.D.
Maj. USA (Ret.)
Thomas
Burk
Major, US
Air Force, Ret
Mike
Krupa
Ph. D
student, Lublin, Poland
Vicente Tommasi
Argentina
Erik
Persson, Ph.D.
Lund,
Sweden
Ferdinand Hellers
Attorney
at Law
Stockholm, Sweden
David
Rodriguez
Masters
of Theology (University
of Dallas), Texas
Cooper
Hennick
Engineering Student
University of Wisconsin
- Madison
Don Kawaja, P.Eng, MBA
(Harvard)
Prof. César Félix
Sánchez Martínez
Universidad Católica de
San Pablo in Arequipa,
Perú
Cultural Commentarist
at Arequipa's main
newspaper El Pueblo
Sheila
T. Parkhill
Attorney
at Law
U.S.A.
Carlos M.
Martínez Núñez
Buenos
Aires, Argentina
Fr. David R. Belland
Diocese of St. Cloud,
MN
Peter
John Morrell D.O.
Medical
Doctor
USA
Mark Flessner
Master of
International and
Comparative Law
Virginia, USA
Michael J. Rayes
Rafka
Press
Phoenix,
Arizona
Prof.
Dr. Juan Carlos Ossandón
Valdés
Andrew
T. Eells
Orthodox
Christian
USA
Joseph
L. De Clue, Jr.
Attorney
at Law
Santa
Ana, California, USA
Andrew
Senior
Professor
of English
St.
Mary's College SSPX
Carol Byrne, MA, PhD
Catholic
Author
Middlesbrough, UK
Dr
Benjamin Byrne
University Lecturer in
Physics,
Middlesbrough, United
Kingdom
Pavel Zahradnik
Historian
Czech Republic
Fr.
Vidko Podrzaj
Horjul,
Slovenia
Leo
Hunt
Graduate
Student
Catholic
University of America,
Washington D.C.
Michael and Margaret
Rooney
Glasgow,
Scotland, UK
Fr Ricardo Isaguirre
SSPX
Barcelona, Spain
Rubén
Peretó Rivas
Professor
of Medieval Philosophy
at the Universidad
Nacional de Cuyo
(Argentina)
José
María Permuy Rey
La Coruña.
España
Félix
Esteban Dufourq
President
of Una Voce Argentina
(Father
of Nine)
Lawyer
Robert
J. Hanten
President
of Solidarity Financial,
Inc.
USA
Staff of Voice of
Catholic Tradition
Long
Island, New York
Leszek
Kolodziejczyk
University Lecturer in
Mathematics
Warsaw,
Poland
Radoslaw
Malicki
Ustrzyki
Dolne, Poland
Gil
Roseira Cardoso Dias
Lisbon,
Portugal
Robert Gomez
Inglaterra
Teresa
i Andrzej Klimek
Rzeszów,
Poland
Wojciech Stachurski
Student
Głogów,
Poland
Halina Ostowicz
Warszawa - Polska
Franciscus Seto
Yeremia Giuseppe
Satriohadi
Jakarta,
Indonesia
Tadeusz Orlowski
Toronto, Canada
Piotr
Jaroszczak
Przemyśl,
Poland
Jery
Jaśkowski MD
Poland
Paweł
Naruszewicz
WROCLAW/POLAND
Dalmiro Gomez
Argentina
Jose Luis Ventrice
Profesor en Historia
Mar del Plata
Argentina
César
Hernández Gómez
Barcelona
Paweł Sudewicz
Biala Podlaska,
POLAND
Brian and Frances Lavin
Wanganui, New Zealand
Emiliano Javier
Cuccia
Professor of
Philosophy
Godoy Cruz, Mendoza,
Argentina
Józef Struszczyk
Polska
Fr
Konstantyn Najmowicz IBP
(Institutum
a Bono Pastore)
Wrocław,
Poland
Lucyna Jasińska-Papaj
Gdańsk, Poland
Arkadiusz Robaczewski,
President
of Summorum Pontificum
Institut
Powstańców, Ząbki
Poland
Jacek Papaj
Ph.D. Astronomer
Gdańsk, Poland
Daniel
Słowik
Łęczna,
Poland
Paweł Jamróz
Podgrodzie (near Tarnów),
Poland
Cancio
Ortiz de la Renta
San Juan
Isla de Puerto Rico
Piotr Korycki
Calgary, Canada /
Legionowo, Poland
Rozalia Korycka
Calgary, Canada /
Legionowo, Poland
Danuta
Krasowska
Psychologist
Choszczno,
Poland
Gary L.
Morella
Research
Faculty, Penn State
University
Piotr
Ogrodnik
Ph.D.
student,
Jozefow,
Poland
Alberto Emilio Vázquez
Calvo
Diplomado en Ciencias
Económicas
U.B.A.
Buenos
Aires
Argentina
Eugeniusz Truchel
Warszawa,
Poland
Bartosz Kuriata
Lutynia,
Poland
Eric
Giunta
Juris
Doctor Candidate, Class
of 2011
Florida
State University College
of Law
Krzysztof Gawel
Sydney,
Australia
Constantino Paz Nieto
Industrial Engineer
Santiago de Compostela
(Spain)
Joseph
Antoniello
Student,
Franciscan University
Grazyna M.Krolowna
Toronto,
Canada
Wojciech Pych
Hanna
Pych
Poznań,
Polska
Jaroslaw Florczyk
Belchatow
Poland
Dr
Gillian Bemrose of
Exeter
Dr
Stephen Bemrose
Exeter,
England
Ralf
Siebenbürger
Former
President of Una Voce
International
Vienna,
Austria
Jeremy Baer
Structural Engineer
Northfield, MN
Tomasz
Grzybowski, MSc, PhD
Univ.
Professor
Bydgoszcz, Poland
Łukasz
D. Gąsiorowski
Student,
Knight of Colombus
Niwna,
Częstochowa
Poland
Axel Alvarez Frati
Pharmacist
Ciudad
Autonoma de Buenos Aires
ARGENTINA
Maciej
Kurowski
Konin,
Poland
Peter R Mackin
Glasgow
United Kingdom
Emmanuel Kitandwe,
Kampala,
Uganda, East Africa
Wolfgang Edenharter
WERNE,
Germany
Kresimir Veselic
Professor
Emeritus of Mathematics
Germany
Christophe Buffin de
Chosal
Belgium
Dr.
and Mrs. Frederick
Wenzel
Virginia,
USA
O.W.
Haye
The Hague
The
Netherlands
Daniel
Murphy, JD,MBA
Professional Airline
Pilot
USA
Ben Gordon
Student, University of
Auckland
Krzysztof K. D.
Romanowski
Lodz,
Poland
B. C. Gilmore,
Woodend, Victoria,
Australia
James F.
Brady
London
U.K.
Mrs
Johanna Higgins LLB
Northern
Ireland, the Kings Inns,
Dublin
Inner Temple, London,
Barrister. Association
of Catholic Lawyers in
Ireland
Mr. &
Mrs. James W.
Cunningham, Jr.
Hardy, AR
USA
Christopher Hyde
Paris,
France
Joseph .K .Manyeki
Nairobi,
Kenya
Javier
Lopez C
Bolivia,
South America
Eduardo
Beltrán Ramírez
Chile
Paul Lavin, Ph.D.
USA
Juceli
Bianco
Santa
Catarina-Brazil
Stephen Onyango
Rongo - Kenya
East Africa
Judith
Martin
Office of
University Development
The Ohio
State University
Columbus,
Ohio
(Retired)
Francis J. Eason MD
San Marcos, CA
USA
Albert D. Huntz
Tonawanda, NY
Rosa E.
Aguirre
Chile
Kathleen McManus
English and Maths
Tutor
Student, Athabasca
University
CANADA
M. Eric Frankovitch
Frankovitch, Anetakis,
Colantonio & Simon
USA
Joe O'Connell
County Cork
Ireland
Robert
Eady
Novelist,
Poet
Canada
Tomasz
Stepien
Student
Theology
Poland
Dr.
Peter J. Chile
Colonel,
USA (Ret)
William Napier
Former
Sgt. of U.S. Marines
Mary
Buckalew, Ph.D.
Professor
Emerita
Department of English
University of North
Texas
Cécilien Pelchat
Lac-Mégantic,Québec
Canada
Maria
del Carmen Lorca Sánchez
and Miguel Serrano
Cabeza
Murcia,
Spain
Mr
Seán Wright
President, University of
Oxford Newman Society
England
Robert
Bond
Doctoral
Candidate
USA
Calogero Cammarata
Presidente
dell'Associazione
Inter
Multiplices Una Vox
Carmagnola (TO)
Italia
Gerald
Benitz, Ph.D.
Harvard,
MA
Rosa E.
Aguirre
Chile
William C. Buckalew, PhD
Professor
of Computer Science
USA
Robert Carballo, PhD
Professor of Comparative
Literature
USA
Jorge Alberto Fiat
Corrientes- Argentina
Mr.
Valentine Gallagher
Sydney.
Australia
David
Larsson
student,
Linköping,
Sweden
Philip
Robinson,
Canberra. ACT
Veronica Robinson,
Canberra.
ACT.
Neal
Damgaard
Husband &
Father
Calgary,
Alberta
Maria
Damgaard
Wife &
Mother
Calgary,
Alberta
Daniel
A. Connell, M.I.
Software
Engineer, IBM
Nashua, NH
USA
Father Gary Carr
Diocesan Priest
Roman Catholic Diocese
of Springfield-Cape
Girardeau
Southern Missouri
Leo
Clear
Dublin,
Ireland
Michael
Shepherd
Peter
Shepherd
Patricia
Shepherd
Katherine
Wyer
County
Kerry, Ireland
Edward J. White
Attorney-at-Law
USA
Rev.
Matthew J Pomilio
Diocese
of Brooklyn
Marco
Toti
Scholar
Rome,
Italy
Matteo Mazzalupi
Art
Historian
Rome,
Italy
Albertus
Stalioraitis
Amsterdam,
Netherlands
Maciej
Wojtal
Wrocław -
Poland
Andrea
Peracchio
Torino
Italy
Cosimo
Puce
("Acerbo
Nimis")
Lecce
(Italy)
Arcangelo Santoro
Sparanise
-ITALY-
Wojciech Golonk
Catholic Bookstore
Director
Paris,
France
Tiziano
Bracci
Milano,
Italy
Ing. Alessandro
Peracchio
Torino, Italy
Federico Catani
Jesi (An) Italy
Jorge P.
Bena
Argentina
Richard Cowden Guido
Catholic
author
New York
City USA
Guglielmina Di Peppe
Villamagna (Chieti -
Italy)
Piero Zacchetti
Milano – Italia
Gustavo
A. Saborido
Architect
Buenos
Aires, Argentina
Michal
Kreft
Poland
Jerzy Leja (Jerzy
Leja)
Citizen of Poland,
Former activist of
Solidarity
Lorenzo Pollutri
Villamagna (Chieti -
Italy)
Prof.
Fiorenzo Mignini
Italy
Ettore
Aronadio
Insegnante
Italia
Monica
Beckingham
Co.
Leitrim
Republic
of Ireland
Abbé
Benoît Wailliez
Supérieur
de District, Bruxelles
Padraig Nugent
Teach
Nugent
Co
Kildare
Éire
Dr.
John Lamont
University of Notre Dame
Australia
Jean Bascou
La
Varenne St Hilaire
FRANCE
Timothy Davies
Bruxelles
Martins Veide
Riga, Latvia
Vorobiova Natalia Marina
Vicenza, Italy
Tomasz Soczyński
Warsaw,
Poland
Szymon Napierala
Poland
Renel Balbuena Peña
Mandaluyong
City, Philippines
Thousands
of Catholics from around
the world have now
signed this Statement.
On a daily basis we are
posting a sampling of
signatories from
different age groups,
professions and foreign
countries in order to
give an idea of the
widespread support it
has received thus far.
The Statement has been
sent to the Vatican
Congregation for the
Causes of Saints and it
will be sent again on
April 25, along with all
of the signatories.
If you would like to
sign it,
please
send us an email to
have your name added
or use
the following email
address:
[email protected]
|