Monday, March 10, 2025

Women's O R D I N A T I O N Conference: We Will Go On S T R I K E!

 An oxymoron if there ever was one!

Females can't be deacons; they can't be priests; they never were and never will be!

Having said that, the extreme modernists in the new, novus ordo, synodal "church" are pushing for just that!  Will it be just a matter of time before we see such invalid "ordinations," and ex-communicated creatures performing "mass"?

(Note: this has already happened! See here: Excommunicated, she still celebrates Mass.)

Keep in mind, that such lunacy is being pushed by some radical, non-Catholic "cardinals," especially those of northern Europe and some right here in the U.S.!  And who is the one prominent, Trump-hating "cardinal" here in the U.S.?  Why none other than the newly appointed Cardinal Archbishop of D.C., "cardinal" McElroy!

Now, it seems, that some females are organizing a "strike" -- to cut off their services to the parishes they attend...

I'll post an article from Religion News Service here: Catholic women go on Lenten strike to highlight their work in the church and written by Claire Giangravé

March 5, 2025

"(RNS) — As Lent began on Ash Wednesday (March 5), Catholic women frustrated over being disenfranchised by the church despite promises of greater recognition are going on strike, withholding numerous services and ministries to their Catholic parishes, schools and universities.

Organized by the Women’s Ordination Conference, a 50-year-old group based in Rome that advocates for women to be made priests, bishops and deacons, the Catholic Women Strike is planned to go through Easter, April 20. It also includes a day of action on March 9, where women are invited to protest and advocate for greater inclusion and influence in the church.

“We’re calling the women of the Catholic Church to join together in striking from sexism by withholding labor, time and financial resources from the church during Lent,” said Kate McElwee, executive director of the Women’s Ordination Conference.

The conference has prepared a toolkit to answer questions about how to participate in the strike, suggesting that women refrain from attending Mass, send letters to their local priest or bishop highlighting the need for recognition of women’s roles or withhold donations and work.

According to church data, women perform the vast majority of the work in churches and dioceses and make up 80% of lay ecclesial ministers.

The recently ended Synod on Synodality, a three-year-long global consultation of Catholic faithful called by Pope Francis in 2021, raised hopes that the church might open the door for women to be ordained as deacons, who may perform some of the church’s seven sacraments and preach at Mass. Women’s roles in the church was among the top concerns of Catholics in the consultation that went on in parishes and dioceses, with most saying they’d like to see women have a greater say in decisions.

But before the synod’s final meeting in Rome, where women were given a vote in the proceedings alongside bishops and other clergy, the pope put the brakes on the push for women deacons, saying the question “was not yet mature.” He instead created a study group to further discern the church’s options. 

Advocates for women’s ordination hold banners during a protest in Rome just in front of the Vatican, where Pope Francis is holding the Synod of Bishops, Oct. 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

“Following the Synod on Synodality and the lack of concrete actions for women and women’s greater participation in the life of the church, there was a lot of disappointment, anger and heartbreak,” said McElwee.

McElwee said that it’s hard to gather data on how many women will take part in the strike but said she was hearing from women working in embassies, universities, schools and dioceses, from the United States to Poland and Italy. Many women who volunteer in their parishes are also taking part in the initiative. 

Suzanne Holt-Savage, 62, a lay Dominican associate who worships at Christ on the Mountain Catholic Church in Lakewood, Colorado, said she learned about the strike in an email from the Women’s Ordination Conference and decided to lead a group of 10 women to participate and lead a witness outside the Denver Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception on March 9.

“I had misgivings about the Synod on Synodality, but I still hoped it would bring women’s ordination forward, and it really didn’t,” Holt-Savage said in a phone interview.

She said she already sent an email to her priest explaining why she won’t be attending Mass on Sundays and that she will also withhold her donations. Holt-Savage explained that she has longed for women to have a greater voice in the Catholic Church, adding that she was struck on the few occasions she heard women in other denominations preach.

“Having more girls grow up seeing the likes of Bishop (Mariann) Budde, what she said from the pulpit, that’s what I want,” Holtsavage said, referring to the Episcopal bishop of Washington who made an appeal for mercy during a prayer service attended by President Donald Trump the day after his inauguration. “That was so fantastic to me, seeing a woman speaking like that, having that platform,” she added.

Kelly Hamilton, 66, one of the women who will protest outside the Denver cathedral, said she can’t do much more for the strike. She performs countless ministries for the Christ on a Mountain parish, including leading the choir as a soloist and working on a committee to provide underprivileged families with everything from Christmas gifts to grocery cards. Hamilton also visits nursing homes with the parish’s deacon to make sure that the elderly have the Eucharist once a month. During her interview with RNS, she was cooking a casserole for a funeral service.

“I will not withhold my ministry because, to me, it would hurt other people. It would hurt mostly the women that I work alongside, because their workload would double,” she said, “but I do see the necessity of having more power, or at least have a place at the table in the church, and we really don’t have that.”

Hamilton said she was among those who were disappointed by the synod’s failure to recognize the role of women and the female diaconate, especially after she had taken part in several synodal meetings in the parish, where the question was front and center.

“You kind of wonder, why am I going to all these meetings and giving all this time when my voice isn’t going to be heard? So I just keep on working, because I will never leave the Catholic religion, because I don’t feel like I can change it if I leave it,” she said.

If women’s roles are a concern in U.S. churches, said Elisa Belotti, 28, a Catholic in Brescia, in northern Italy, simply not showing up at church gatherings or Mass would be counterproductive in Italy.

“If you are a woman who is very active in promoting women’s roles, they might be happy if you are not there,” she said. “Being present is also a form of resistance that needs to be maintained.”

Instead, she will join a strike organized by Italian Women for the Church, another Catholic feminist organization, by focusing on raising awareness about the work women already do in the church and informing as many people as possible about the strike and the reasons behind it.

“We want the church to be evangelizing and open to everyone who wants to be a part of this faith,” Belotti said, adding that she hopes “this strike will be the necessary jolt to have a more concrete understanding of the problems that exist.”'

End of article...

Pretty sick stuff, to say the least...

(What I will say, is that some of those females in the photo do not look very feminine, lacking modesty in dress, for one thing, but I'll let you can decide that for yourself.) 

Pray for the conversion of these heretics and apostates, and for strength and honor!

Viva Cristo Rey!  Bl. Fr. Miguel Pro, Fr. Emil Kapaun and Fr. Vincent Capodanno, pray for us...

St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle...

St. Joseph pray for us!!

Gene DeLalla 







Saturday, March 8, 2025

Devastating Implications Of Heretical "Cardinals" Voting In The Next Conclave! (The Sedevacantists Will Have A Field Day, Proving They Are "Right"!)

 Think about the horrific implications of heretics voting for the next pope!

What are some of those implications?

How about the fact that a heretic "cardinal" is no longer in the Catholic Church (no longer holds the Catholic faith), votes in a conclave that would not be valid, and the "election" would not be valid, therefore, that person "elected" -- the pope -- would not be valid!

Please correct me if I'm wrong on this...

(Note: If ex-communicated "cardinals" do vote in the next conclave, The Sedevacantists Will Have A Field Day, Proving They Are "Right"! -- There would be no valid pope!)                                         

No, I'm not a sedevacantist, but reality must be faced, regardless of the consequences!   Truth cannot be compromised or ignored for the sake of "unity," or to put on a proper face for the world to see...

And that's part of the problem with those heterodox, heretical "cardinals," they have embraced the zeitgeist -- the spirit of the world -- to form a new, novus ordo, synodal "church".  (A new synodal church are the words they have used!)

The following articles and videos shed some much-needed light on this horrendous situation now facing what the world sees as the Catholic Church.

Frist, we have an article from lifesitenews.com and written by Emily

MangiaracinaRalph Martin emphasizes danger of heretical cardinals taking part in the next papal conclave - LifeSite.

(Dr. Ralph Martin is by no means a "rad trad," not at all, but he acknowledges a very dire and present danger of heretic cardinals voting in the next conclave.  Please read and listen with an open mind!) 

Mon Mar 3, 2025 - 7:45 pm EST

"(LifeSiteNews) — Author and seminary professor Dr. Ralph Martin highlighted in a recent video the danger of the participation of heretical cardinals — like Robert McElroy — in the next papal conclave. 

Last week, Dr. Martin pointed to an article by Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois, in which the orthodox bishop called out the heresy of certain prelates and warned that such heresy incurs automatic excommunication. 


As an example, Paprocki quoted from an article by McElroy in which the cardinal argued that the Catholic Church must permit unrepentant adulterers and active homosexuals to Holy Communion. Paprocki referred to McElroy’s condemnation of “a theology of eucharistic coherence that multiplies barriers to the grace and gift of the eucharist.”

McElroy wrote “as if no such barriers existed,” Paprocki noted. He continued:

They do exist, and they are a matter of divine revelation. The truth about eucharistic coherence that must be believed by divine and Catholic faith was articulated by St. Paul in his First Letter to the Corinthians: “Whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord … For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment upon himself” (1 Cor. 11:27-29). This has been the constant teaching of the Church for the past 2,000 years. 

“To invite people to receive without repentance without faith, it’s really a sacrilege, it’s really blasphemous in many different ways,” Dr. Martin remarked.

He pointed out that Paprocki also took aim at Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich’s claim that “homosexual acts are not sinful” and that same-sex unions should be blessed by the Church. 

“Unfortunately, it is not uncommon today to hear Catholic leaders affirm unorthodox views that, not too long ago, would have been espoused only by heretics,” Paprocki remarked. “‘Heretic’ and ‘heresy’ are strong words, which contemporary ecclesiastical politeness has softened to gentler expressions such as ‘our separated brethren … ‘”

Paprocki stressed that such terms, however, are used for those who “reject essential truths of the faith … Thus, it is deeply troubling to consider the possibility that prelates holding the office of diocesan bishop in the Catholic Church may be separated or not in full communion because of heresy.”

The bishop maintained that both the statements cited above from Cardinals McElroy and Hollerich “would in fact involve heresy” because they constitute “the obstinate denial or obstinate doubt … of some truth which is to be believed by divine and Catholic faith,” the canonical definition of heresy.

He further pointed out that canon 1364 states that “an apostate from the faith, a heretic, or a schismatic incurs a latae sententiae excommunication,” meaning such persons are automatically excommunicated “without any canonical process.”

Dr. Martin alluded to Paprocki’s warning that if the pope does not remove heretical cardinals from office or laicize them, “the unseemly prospect arises of a cardinal, excommunicated latae sententiae due to heresy, voting in a papal conclave.”

Not only has Pope Francis not dismissed these prelates from their office or from the clerical state, Dr. Martin noted, he has actively promoted them. McElroy was recently appointed archbishop of Washington, D.C., and both were personally chosen by Francis as voting members of the Synod on Synodality. 

Speculation about the likely theological leanings of the next pope has been growing as Francis’ health worsens. LifeSiteNews’ Raymond Wolfe has pointed to Francis’ radical, heterodox American appointments to the College of Cardinals as indicative of his aspirations to usher in “a different Church” that “would all but destroy the Catholic Church as we know it.” According to Wolfe:

Their vision, much of it rooted in Francis’ controversial apostolic exhortation Amoris Laetitia, includes dismantling the Church’s understanding of sin and conscience, overhauling Catholic teaching on homosexuality and the family, entrenching LGBT activism within the Church, and shielding homosexual abusers while crushing the faithful Catholic priests and laity who stand in their way.

McElroy alone has suggested that the Synod on Synodality will be a key part of reshaping even the “deposit of faith,” writing that the synodal process seeks “nothing less than a recasting of the culture of the church that will endure for generations,” and that “The deposit of faith is not an inert and abstract body of teaching.”

Considering that someone as practically heterodox as Francis has already been elected, and that since then he has only further stacked the College of Cardinals with like-minded men, many commentators anticipate that the next pope will be just as heterodox or worse.

Dr. Martin on Wednesday expressed his desire that, contrary to the prelates promoted by Francis, bishops would speak more clearly about the core of the Catholic faith and “what life is all about: It’s about dying in friendship with the Lord; it’s about having our sins forgiven; it’s about being freed from the power of the evil one; it’s about Resurrection from the dead.”'

End of article...

Next, I have a video (about 10 minutes in length) from http://www.virginmostpowerfulradio.org/​


Pray for the conversion of these heterodox, heretical "cardinals" -- and for strength and honor!

Viva Cristo Rey!  Bl. Fr. Miguel Pro, Fr. Emil Kapaun and Fr. Vincent Capodanno, pray for us...

St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle...

St. Joseph pray for us!!

Gene DeLalla 














Thursday, March 6, 2025

Where Do We Get Such Creatures? From The Pit Of Hell?? "Cardinal" Roche: ‘Nothing Wrong’ With Latin Mass But Church Needed To ‘Move Away’ From It

 From lifesitenews.com and written by Michael Haynes, Snr. Vatican Correspondent, comes this gem: Cardinal Roche: ‘Nothing wrong’ with Latin Mass but Church needed to ‘move away’ from it - LifeSite

With characters such as "cardinal" Roche, the Church doesn't need any outside enemies, and, yes, he knows exactly what he's doing, and that's the scary part!

But he's simply following orders, right?  

Where have I heard that before?  

How about World War II and the demons responsible for the slaughter of nearly 6,000,000 Jews, Catholics and others -- yes, many Catholics were wiped out, not just the Jews!

Roche's hate for the Traditional Latin Mass has been made manifest for years under the heavy-handed Bishop of Rome, Bergoglio... 

It seems he has a tremendous disdain for those young, growing families who attend and love the TLM, along with those faithful priests who celebrate the most beautiful thing this side of Heaven!

Please read this article from lifesitenews.com, and I apologize in advance if the info turns your stomach upside down!

Thu Mar 6, 2025 - 7:14 am EST

"VATICAN CITY (LifeSiteNews) — After vigorously implementing Pope Francis restrictions on the traditional Mass, Cardinal Arthur Roche has said there is “nothing wrong” with the Latin Mass but that the Church wished to “move away from what had become an overly elaborate form of celebrating the Mass.”

Prefect of the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments (DDW) since May 2021, Cardinal Arthur Roche has overseen the radical restrictions imposed on the traditional Latin Mass by Pope Francis since July of that year.

Roche was already known as an opponent of the traditional Mass upon his promotion from secretary to prefect of the DDW.

Speaking to the Catholic Herald recently, the 75-year-old Roche fielded a question about the numbers of young Catholics flocking to the Latin Mass while having to deal with his restrictions on it.

Of course, it is good that people want to be part of the Church, and there is no reason why they cannot,” he said.

“There is nothing wrong with attending the Mass celebrated with the 1962 missal,” added Roche. “That has been accepted since the time of Pope St. John Paul II, Pope Benedict, and now Pope Francis.”

He continued, arguing that Francis’ restrictions in Traditionis Custodes showed that the Latin Mass “is not the norm.”

“For very good reasons, the Church, through conciliar legislation, decided to move away from what had become an overly elaborate form of celebrating the Mass,” stated Roche.

The English cardinal commented on the numbers of devotees of the traditional Mass as being “in reality, quite small, but some of the groups are quite clamorous. They are more noticeable because they make their voices heard.”

Roche repeated a much cited – and equally often rebuffed – argument made by critics against the Latin Mass, stating that the new Mass, or Novus Ordo Missae, exposes Catholics to more readings from Scripture over the course of its three-year lectionary cycle. “There is a much lower percentage of scriptural readings in the 1962 missal than there are in the newer missal,” he argued.

Notably, Roche appeared confused about why individuals are annoyed by others offering the Latin Mass, commenting that “what interests me is why people get hot under the collar about others celebrating the Tridentine Mass. I think this has been a mistake. Bishop Wheeler, of the Diocese of Leeds, insisted that a Holy Mass be celebrated in Latin according to the Novus Ordo at least once every Sunday in every deanery. That showed considerable wisdom.”

In his own view, Roche said that “the celebration of the Eucharist, in whichever missal you are using, should be very noble and marked by noble simplicity.”

He also appeared to jokingly rebuff the concerns of devotees of the traditional Mass by quipping that he says Mass in Latin most days in the Vatican:

I often hear people say, “Cardinal Roche is against the Latin Mass.” Well, if they only knew that most days I celebrate Mass in Latin because it is the common language for all of us here. It is the Novus Ordo Mass in Latin. I was trained as an altar boy until the age of 20, serving the Tridentine Form.

‘Hot under the collar’

Roche’s apparent confusion at people’s frustration with priests offering the Latin Mass comes in direct opposition to his own record on the matter. Along with the Pope’s restrictions on the ancient liturgy, Roche has issued his own restrictions with papal backing, and has been widely documented as rigorously enforcing restrictions on the Latin Mass in dioceses across the world to the detriment of often thriving congregations.

The latest figures show that in 2022, Roche’s office permitted just 60 parishes worldwide to host the traditional Mass, as he has emerged as the most ardent enforcer of a crackdown against the ancient liturgy.

READ: Vatican allowed fewer than 60 parish churches worldwide to offer Latin Mass in 2022

Indeed, former Vatican doctrine prefect Cardinal Gerhard Müller revealed last summer that “a senior representative of Roche’s Dicastery for Divine Worship” was dismayed when he heard of the huge numbers of young pilgrims on the traditional Mass pilgrimage to Chartres. Müller said the official “objected that this was by no means a cause for joy, because Holy Mass was celebrated according to the old Extraordinary Latin rite.”

Roche was also believed to be one of the leading architects of a document containing fresh restrictions on the Latin Mass last year, though following an outpouring of public demonstration from Catholics and non-Catholics – along with direct lobbying of the Pope by a Russian Orthodox man – the document never emerged.

While Roche and his Vatican office have persistently rolled back permission for the Latin Mass, the cardinal previously described devotees of the old rite as more Protestant than Catholic for their adherence to the Latin Mass.

“The theology of the Church has changed,” necessitating a change in liturgy, argued Roche in a public radio broadcast in 2023.

READ: Cardinal Sarah: Plans to ‘abolish’ Latin Mass would be ‘diabolical’

In early 2022, Roche repeated his prior sentiments, calling the remaining provisions of the Latin Mass “a pastoral concession,” and that the growth of the Latin Mass “couldn’t be tolerated because the [Second Vatican] Council had changed the way in which we’re going forward. That’s just a simple matter.”

His comments on the liturgy have been robustly criticized by scholars and journalists, with Roche accused of being ignorant of ecclesial history and liturgy or “shamelessly twisting the truth about the Latin Mass.”

Meanwhile, canon lawyers have argued that some of Roche’s actions violate the Church’s Canon Law and his restrictions have been criticized by his brothers among the College of Cardinals. Cardinal Raymond Burke has described Roche’s Responsa ad dubia as “confused” and “contradictory,” stating that “what the congregation [DDW] pretends is not only contrary to the good order of the Church, but contrary to reason.”'

End of very revealing article...

Pray for the defeat of these modernist monsters -- and for their conversion!

Viva Cristo Rey!  Bl. Fr. Miguel Pro, Fr. Emil Kapaun and Fr. Vincent Capodanno, pray for us...

St.  Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle...

St. Joseph pray for us!!

Gene DeLalla 













‘Episcopal Vicaress’ Appointed By Heterodox, Heretic Austrian "Bishop" Josef Marketz! Is She On The Road To The "Priesthood"?

 The lunacy just keeps coming and coming and coming...

Heterodox, heretic Austrian "bishop" has taken it upon himself to create a new, extra-canonical title specifically for women!!

Let that sink in!

From the Pillar (Austrian bishop names first ‘episcopal vicaress’) comes this nonsense: "The Diocese of Gurk-Klagenfurt said Feb. 26 that Bishop Marketz had named pastoral theologian Barbara Velik-Frank to the new diocesan office of “episcopal vicaress for synodality and Church development,” beginning March 1."

While the move is sure to provoke a response from canon lawyers — because the title of vicar is reserved to priests — Austrian Bishop Josef Marketz claims he has created a new, extra-canonical title specifically for women.

Bishop Josef Marketz and Barbara Velik-Frank with the decree announcing her appointment as ‘episcopal vicaress for synodality and Church development’ in the Gurk-Klagenfurt diocese. © Diözesan-Pressestelle Gurk-Klagenfurt/Eggenberger.

The Diocese of Gurk-Klagenfurt said Feb. 26 that Bishop Marketz had named pastoral theologian Barbara Velik-Frank to the new diocesan office of “episcopal vicaress for synodality and Church development,” beginning March 1.


The term “episcopal vicar” is derived from the Latin vicarius, meaning “substitute” or “deputy” of the bishop. According to canon law, an episcopal vicar must be a priest, because he exercises certain delegated powers linked to sacramental orders on behalf of a bishop.


In German-speaking countries, an episcopal vicar is known as a Bischofsvikar. The female equivalent would be Bischofsvikarin. But Velik-Frank will have the distinctive German title of Bischöfliche Vikarin, or “episcopal vicaress.”


Other European dioceses have made comparable appointments. At least two countries have female episcopal delegates, who serve as territorial coordinators responsible for a region of a diocese.

In 2020, Marianne Pohl-Henzen was named as an episcopal delegate in the Swiss Diocese of Lausanne, Geneva, and Fribourg, responsible for the German-speaking diocesan region in the canton of Fribourg. In 2021, Céline Ruffieux was named episcopal delegate of the canton’s French-speaking diocesan region. Pohl-Henzen was succeeded in 2024 by the 32-year-old Isabella Senghor.


In 2022, Marie-Andrée Beuret was appointed as a co-episcopal delegate for the French-speaking part of the Swiss Diocese of Basel.


In 2024, Rebecca Alsberge began a five-year term as episcopal delegate for the vicariate of Brabant Walloon, Belgium. Local pastors have been asked to include her in the Eucharistic Prayer at Masses.

According to the Gurk-Klagenfurt diocese, the canonical basis of the new office of episcopal vicaress is Pope Francis’ Nov. 25 note on the synod on synodality’s final document, which said that “synodality is the appropriate interpretative framework for understanding the hierarchical ministry.”

The papal note, which addressed how the final document should be implemented in dioceses worldwide, said that “in many cases, it is a matter of effectively implementing what is already provided for by existing law, both Latin and Eastern.”


But it added that “in other cases, it will be possible to proceed, through a synodal discernment and within the framework of the possibilities indicated by the final document, to the creative activation of new forms of ministeriality and missionary action, experimenting and subjecting experiences to verification.”


The synod on synodality’s final document strongly endorsed the appointment of women to Church leadership positions.


It said: “There is no reason or impediment that should prevent women from carrying out leadership roles in the Church: what comes from the Holy Spirit cannot be stopped.”


Comment: is it from the Holy Ghost, or...??


(My emphasis.)


The Gurk-Klagenfurt diocese covers the territory of Carinthia, Austria’s southernmost and least densely populated state. It serves around 338,000 Catholics out of a population of roughly 570,000 people.


Outlining Velik-Frank’s new role, the Gurk-Klagenfurt diocese said: “As a layperson commissioned by the bishop, Velik-Frank is under the authority of the bishop as her technical superior and the vicar general as her official superior.”


Bishop Marketz said the creation of the new office and Velik-Frank’s appointment were “not only important steps on the synodal path, but above all also concrete realizations of the strengthening of the laity, and women in particular, called for by Pope Francis.”


He added: “She has my full confidence that she will continue to put the synodal Church development on the right path and continue in the spirit of Pope Francis and the Synod of Bishops to restructure the Church in Carinthia and position it well for the future.”


Velik-Frank, who has coordinated the diocese’s Church development process for the past three years, said her new role was “a special honor and also a further sign of more leadership responsibility for women in the Church.”


Pope Francis has made several groundbreaking appointments of women to Vatican positions since his election in 2013. In July 2022, he named three women to the Dicastery for Bishops.


In January, he appointed Sr. Simona Brambilla as prefect of the Dicastery for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life.


Earlier this month, he named Sr. Raffaella Petrini as president of the Governorate of Vatican City State."


End of very disturbing article...


I'm sure that this lady is a nice person, but apparently she doesn't know the infallible tenets of the Catholic Faith! How sad...


This is the face of the new, novus ordo, synodal "church"!  Get used to it, because the next "pope," I feel, will be just as heterodox as Bergoglio -- or worse!


We must not obey such destroyers of souls, and must resist to the face, these infiltrators!


Pray for strength and honor!


Viva Cristo Rey!  Bl. Fr. Miguel Pro, Fr. Emil Kapaun and Fr. Vincent Capodanno, pray for us...


St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle...


St. Joseph pray for us!!


Gene DeLalla 











Can This Be Real?? Joseph Maria Bonnemain, Bishop of Chur, Says No Excommunication For...Giving Eucharist To Dogs!!!!

WARNING!  WARNING!  WARNING! BEWARE, THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION CONTAINS VERY DISTURBING INFORMATION THAT JUST MAY MAKE YOUR BLOOD BOIL! I as...