Saturday, March 20, 2010

Let Bishop Williamson's voice yet be heard..

For well over 20 year, Bishop Richard Williamson of the Society of St. Pius X has been a powerful and consistent voice among traditional Catholics worldwide. That voice was effectively silenced by SSPX leadership after his infamous January 2009 interview for Swedish TV. Since then, truth be told, they have made every effort to expunge his memory from the collective Catholic consciousness. Just try securing any of his tapes or writings from any of the Society's chapel bookstores or seminaries. Even more difficult to obtain from these same sources, I am told, are any of the four volumes of the good bishop's Letters From the Rector, first published in 2008. To order copies of them, the reader will have to go to True Restoration Press at http://www.truerestorationpress.com/catalog/1. Otherwise, forget it! They are as scarce as hen's teeth. I know of at least one active Society priest who is unaware that these books even exist. Think I'm exaggerating?
In any case, let me introduce a sampling of one of these "Letters" for those who may lack a basic acquaintance with them, and for others, as well. The four volumes cover a period beginning in 1988 and ending in 2003. The letters were written monthly, updating the faithful about political, social and cultural issues from a Catholic point of view, and providing them with practical instruction and enlightenment in the maintenance of their Faith. The letter reprinted below is from February 4, 1993 (#112) It is entitled:

The American Patriot's Catechism.

The enclosed Verbum is hardly controversial, but its pre­decessor, headlined "Discovering America's Roots," pre­sented a picture of the Founding Fathers of the United States which did not gain everyone's approval. In particu­lar, a long-standing friend of the Society here in the USA, who has rendered the Society great service, made a series of reasonable objections which deserve a reply. Let me at­tempt the "Catechism of a Patriot." ..

Patriot: By concerning themselves with questions like the founding of the USA, don't priests risk being diverted or distracted from the saving of souls?

Reply: If any man had two heads, he might keep his reli­gion in one and his politics in the other, but inside any one head at any one time, the two things necessarily interact on one another. A man cannot be Liberal in politics without more or less contaminating his Catholic Faith and so en­dangering his soul.

Patriot: But Archbishop Lefebvre wisely left such worldly matters alone, and kept to the Doctrine of the Faith.

Reply: Archbishop Lefebvre may not have explicitly ques­tioned the founding of the American Republic, perhaps because he was never permanently stationed in the USA, but against the ideas of American churchmen he had to fight hard at Vatican II, in particular, against religious liberty. Michael Davies' latest book, The Second Vatican Council and Religious Liberty, shows clearly the part played by the compatriots of the Founding Fathers in the fatal establishing of the principle of religious liberty within the Catholic Church at that Council. Its "Declaration on Religious Liberty" is Americanism infecting the Universal Church. The result is that to defend the Faith anywhere in the world today, a priest must fight these ideas of the Founding Fathers.

Patriot: But Pope Leo XIII about one hundred years ago, with reservations, commended the USA political system. Why should Society of St Pius X priests be more demand­ing than the Pope?

Reply: Pope Leo XIII came before Vatican II; Society priests all come after. The full devastating effect of Americanism (as the Pope called it) upon Catholicism that he then feared, we now know. In Leo's time, the American churchmen could pretend that the Americanism he condemned did not even exist, but by the time of Vatican II, they were posi­tively proud of having "converted" the Catholic Church to the American way-see Michael Davies' book.

Patriot: But the Founding Fathers were decent, God-fear­ing men.

Reply: By no means all of them believed Jesus Christ is God, but let us suppose they were all, as the world goes, honorable men. That does not change the principles on which they built their Republic, which are Freemasonic principles, profoundly harmful to Religion.

Patriot: But not all the Founding Fathers were Masons, and those that were, were Masons-only in name, not in Wickedness like the French Masons who caused the blood-­drenched French Revolution.

Reply: Firstly, the Catholic popes have never distinguished a benevolent Anglo-Saxon Masonry from a malevolent Masonry of the countries of Latin origin. They have always condemned Masonry without distinction, as a whole, and many times. Secondly, Benjamin Franklin, an American Mason, was a close friend and colleague of the French Masons when they were preparing the French Revolution. Thirdly, however many or few American Revolutionaries were Masons, the founding principle of their new Republic- religious liberty- is a key Masonic principle.

Patriot: But the Founding Fathers' idea of liberty was the Catholic idea of liberty, only they left out the authority of the Catholic Church. How can you blame Protestants for that?

Reply: Firstly, their subjective innocence or ignorance God alone can ultimately judge. Here we are questioning their objective achievement. Secondly the opposition between true liberty, centered on God, and Masonic liberty, centered on man, is radical. The difference is not "only" the omis­sion of the Catholic Church (quite an omission!) but two wholly different concepts of God, man, life and law, as Leo XIII makes clear in his Encyclical Libertas, freely quoted in Michael Davies' book.

Patriot: Well, the religious liberty established in the First Amendment has given a marvelous freedom for the Catholic Church to thrive in the USA, ever since the founding of the Republic.

Reply: Freedom, yes, as Leo XIII acknowledges, but a marvelous freedom, no. The problem, in a few words, is that when men found a republic (as they do today all over the world) not just on the practice but on a principle of re­ligious freedom, they are obviously putting the interests of their republic above the interests of anyone religion, other­wise that religion would have primacy in their republic, as today Islam has primacy in Mohammedan republics. Now men are social as well as individual animals. Hence in a re­public of religious liberty, a man may be a pious Catholic individually, but all the social institutions of his inter-reli­gious State are preaching to him that his Catholicism is of secondary importance. At this point he may try to split his politics from his religion, but that is no more possible than to split man from God. So one of two things must happen: either his liberal politics contaminate his Catholic religion, which is how the American bishops at Vatican II ended up "converting" the Catholic Church to the American way, and which is why USA freedom is after all not so good for the Faith; or by the light of his one true Faith he condemns his country's religious liberty and sets out seriously to con­vert his fellow countrymen.

Patriot: But given the mixed religions of the inhabitants of the thirteen colonies, how could the Founding Fathers have founded their republic on any other principle than religious liberty? Impossible!

Reply: No intelligent engineer builds a bridge on sand, but if, for whatever reason, he is forced to do so, at least he does not glorify his bridge. On the contrary, he puts up a no­tice: "DANGER: YOU CROSS THIS BRIDGE AT YOUR PERIL." No intelligent Catholic glorifies a republic built on religious liberty, even if it is his own country. Otherwise politics are going to become his real religion, i.e., what he believes in first and foremost for the welfare of mankind.

Patriot:But the Founding Fathers had no intention of ex­cluding God, or of making liberty into their religion.

Reply: "The way to hell is paved with good intentions." You cannot, however good your intentions, lay down cer­tain principles and not expect their consequences. You cannot establish religious liberty in politics and not expect to undermine all religion wherever those politics apply, at which point religious liberty becomes your real religion.

Patriot: Well, the Founding Fathers may have wanted no State Church, but they did want a country based on Christian principles. The country was Christian, and they assumed it would remain so.

Reply: In that case their right hand did not know what their left hand was doing, which is typical of decent Liberals: their decency is at war with their Liberalism and their Liberalism with their decency. Poor pro-lifers! Many of them seem still to believe in democracy, petitions, letters to editors, etc., etc., but in fact President Clinton's sweep­ing away the Reagan-Bush roadblocks to abortion within two days of becoming president was not in defiance of, but in radical compliance with, democracy, petitions, etc., etc. Where religious liberty takes social precedence over the Catholic Faith or any faith, then implicitly my country's way takes precedence over any law of God, then my coun­trymen's votes entitle the president that they elect to do as he wishes, and any minority that still objects to abortion, for instance, should graciously admit defeat and stop rais­ing the issue, because the people have spoken. And if such a minority insists, the State must be turned loose on it!

Patriot:But the Founding Fathers would be aghast at the present-day development of their Republic.

Reply: No doubt the large majority of them, but that mere­ly shows that, like the Council Fathers of Vatican II who voted for the documents that would serve to destroy the Church, they did not know what they were doing. Liberals are blinded by their illusions. When it comes to building bridges, or republics, no amount of good intentions will make up for ignorance of the laws of engineering.

Patriot: But the situation is no worse in the USA than in many European countries, so the problem is not the Founding Fathers of the USA.

Reply: It is most true that the situation is in significant ways worse in Europe than in the USA. The problem everywhere is Liberalism, or the shaking off of God's truth and God's law. So, true, the problem in the United States is not the Founding Fathers as founding fathers, a task to which they brought many good qualities, but the Founding Fathers as Liberals. In establishing religious liberty, they laid the cor­nerstone of their Republic in Liberalism.

Patriot:But what else could they do?

Reply: You may appeal to historical circumstances, but if these forced the engineers to build on sand, sand is still sand.

Patriot:Are you claiming all Americans are Americanists?

Reply: By no means. Michael Davies' book (available from Angelus Press) is dedicated to the American church­man, Msgr. Joseph C. Fenton, editor of the American Ecclesiastical Review from 1944 to 1963, "whose clear, consistent and courageous defense of papal teaching on Church and State must once again be vindicated as the au­thentic Catholic position."

Patriot: Then the only reason why President Clinton has prevailed over the Catholics is because time ran out for the Catholics before they could convert the Republic.

Reply: No. The reason is because too many American Catholics aligned themselves with the Masonic principles of the Republic instead of condemning them, which is why their bishops "converted" Vatican II. God bless American pro-lifers, the movement is stronger in the USA than in any other country. However let them throw the best of their tal­ents and energies into purely supernatural action because it is only by the purity of their Catholic Faith, not by any hu­man means, that they can prevail.

Patriot:Do you love America?

Reply: Whoever loves Americans will tell them the truth. Whoever would flatter them with pleasing lies, scorns them.

Patriot: I still think Society priests would do better to leave all such questions alone.

Reply: Any Catholic priest must ask St Paul's question: "Do I now persuade men, or God? Or do I seek to please men? If I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ" (Gal. 1: 10). May God bless the America needing and waiting to be converted to the fullness of the Catholic Faith!

4 comments:

  1. Bishop Williamson forgets that if America had erected a state church and made Catholicism the state religion, when the Sovereign Pontiff, Pope Paul VI, outlawed the old Mass and suspended Archbishop Lefebvre, the SSPX would not have been allowed to have a single school or church in the U.S.

    It is the freedom afforded by our Constitution that has allowed the SSPX the liberty to grow and prosper in the U.S. Unfortunately many SSPXers are ungrateful America-haters, a vice condemned by every pope who addressed the subject.

    In the old Catholic Church we were taught to thank God for America and the religious freedom it afforded Catholics. Bishop Williamson undermined that gratitude and ended up attracting questionable persons with a hidden agenda who would later turn on him when his hour of Holocaust crisis came last year.

    Bishop Williamson's error is in thinking that the freedom of conscience which Christ gave to all of his followers is "masonic." The bishop states, "the founding principle of their new Republic- religious liberty- is a key Masonic principle."

    It certainly is not. It was by freedom of conscience that the apostles left Judaism and joined Jesus. It was by freedom of conscience that traditional Catholics left the diocesan churches and joined the SSPX. It is by freedom of conscience that Bishop Williamson does not obey the commands of his superior and of thep ope himself and recant his views on the Holocaust. Freemasonry undoubtedly exploits this freedom for its own wicked ends, but the Masons are not the author of true liberty; that distinction belongs to Our Lord alone and is clearly visible in the Gospel.

    Bishop Williamson is a brave man who does not deserve to be hounded by his religious superiors and the government of Germany. His thoughts on World War II are worthy of consideration, but much of of his sthinking about the history of the U.S., and on the subject of women, are highly eccentric, to put it charitably.

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  3. Whatever Bp. Williamson's shortcomings with regard to the debate on America and its founding, the huge, overwhelming factor in his favor has been his educational efforts and example regarding Judaism and its perils for Christians. I know of John Birch Society Catholics who will defend George Washington with every ounce of their being and then collaborate either outright with the rabbinic imperative, or indirectly, through support for Zionist shills like Glenn Beck.

    Bp. Williamson is not perfect; let those who are cast the first stone. In the meantime, the world-historic stand he has taken in confirmation of the full Gospel witness concerning Judaism, and against the false witness that constitutes the Auschwitz execution gas chamber tale - which has become more sacred than Calvary - deserves the support and respect of all genuine truth-seekers.

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  4. The average reader too readily commits the fallacy of over-simplification when talking about the 'eccentricities' of Bishop Williamson. He himself would say, "You can't take me too seriously."
    This statement would admit that he often intentionally uses hyperbole when speaking on so many subjects--and when attempting to establish to a reader an understanding of principles.
    The Church herself is very strong in principle but very understanding in practice. Have you never heard the statement [paraphrased], "Be a lion from the pulpit and a sheep in the confessional?" In other words, be strong in principle and soft in application...
    Extra ecclesiam nulla salus animarum--now this is a strong and even terrifying statement. And yet, whom has the Church stated is in Hell who is not in the Church?
    From Scripture, it also says, [1 Tim 2; 11-12]"Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection. But I suffer [Vulgate says "non permitto"] not a woman to teach, nor to use authority over a man: but to be in silence.

    Now that is a hard saying for a modern ear. Is a person who acts within that paradigm in the 20th and 21st centuries guilty of misogyny and 'eccentric'?

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