John Paul II Esteemed The False Religions Of Buddhism & Shintoism (1980)
Buddhism and Shintoism are, of course, false pagan religions. Shintoism is a blatantly idolatrous and polytheistic religion in which its followers worship many spirits and false deities. John Paul II explicitly expressed esteem for the false religions themselves. He was an apostate.
John Paul II, To A Group Of Buddhists And Shintoists, Feb. 20, 1980: âVenerable friends, representatives of Buddhism and Shinto in Japan, I am very happy to welcome you today⊠The Catholic Church EXPRESSES HER ESTEEM FOR YOUR RELIGIONS and for your high spiritual values, such as purity, detachment of heart, love for the beauty of nature, and benevolence and compassion for everything that lives.â
People are commenting on the face made by Ronald Hicks (the Vatican II Sect âArchbishopâ of NYC). It does remind one of Isaiah 3:9: âThe look on their countenance witnesses against them, and they declare their sin as SodomâŠâ
Even if heâs not a sodomite himself, he is guilty of that sin for allowing it to be endorsed, promoted and celebrated at many Vatican II Sect (Novus Ordo) churches in NYC. We have videos coming out, God willing, that will document the shocking things that are promoted at churches under Antipope Leo XIV in NYC and in many other places.
Pope Pius XII Deleted All References To Our Lady As âCo-Redemptrixâ
Fr. Charles BaliÄ was a Franciscan theologian and a consultor to the Holy Office under Pope Pius XII. He was also President of the International Marian Academy. Later on he was appointed (by the Vatican II âChurchâ) to be a theological expert at Vatican II. According to Yves Congar (who was a significant figure at Vatican II), âBaliÄ told us that [Pope] Pius XII had deleted the word Co-Redemptrix in all the documents bearing this title and had replaced it by âSocia Christi Redemptorisâ (Associate of Christ the Redeemer).â (Yves Congar, My Journal Of The Council, Liturgical Press, 2012, p. 72).
Pius XII never used the term âCo-Redemptrixâ as pope. He probably recognized that the term is indeed inaccurate and problematic, and thatâs why he deleted it from drafts. For a full treatment of this matter, see our video called: Is Mary The âCo-Redemptrixâ? â A Catholic Analysis.
John XXIIIâs Heretical Statements To Protestant Roger Schutz
Roger Schutz was a non-Catholic who founded the ecumenical, non-denominational âmonasteryâ of Taize. Yves Congar (a liberal theologian who played a significant role at Vatican II) reports what Schutz told him about John XXIII.
Yves Congar: â⊠[this] was confirmed by a conversation I had with Pastor Roger Schutz on 20 June 1960. Schutz told me, though with the greatest of discretion, about the audience, arranged for him by Cardinal Gerlier, that he had had with John XXIII on the evening of, or the morning after, his consecration. According to Schutz, the Pope [John XXIII] had said some very incredible, even downright heretical, things to him, such as: the Catholic Church does not possess the whole truth; we should search together⊠I think that the leading members of the Curia very quickly realized that, with John XXIII and his plan for a Council, they might be in for a very strange adventureâŠâ (My Journal Of The Council [July 1960], Liturgical Press, 2012, p. 7)
Schutzâs testimony about John XXIIIâs beliefs is credible because John XXIII was in fact a heretic and an antipope who oversaw revolutionary things at Vatican II. Congar was also an ally of John XXIII. John XXIII named him a consultant to the preparatory commission for Vatican II and effectively rehabilitated him. Antipope Benedict XVI also notoriously gave âHoly Communionâ to the non-Catholic Roger Schutz, and he declared that he went to Heaven when he died.