Thursday, May 2, 2019

Pope Francis Accused Of Heresy In Open Letter By Prominent Clergy, Scholars


Prominent clergy, scholars accuse Pope Francis of heresy in open letter



May 2, 2019 update: 20 additional names have been added to list of signers of the open letter, bringing total up to 51.
May 1, 2019 update: 12 more names have been added to list of signers of the open letter, bringing total up to 31. 
April 30, 2019 (LifeSiteNews) – Prominent clergymen and scholars including Fr. Aidan Nichols, one of the best-known theologians in the English-speaking world, have issued an open letter accusing Pope Francis of committing heresy. They ask the bishops of the Catholic Church, to whom the open letter is addressed, to "take the steps necessary to deal with the grave situation" of a pope committing this crime. 
The authors base their charge of heresy on the manifold manifestations of Pope Francis' embrace of positions contrary to the faith and his dubious support of prelates who in their lives have shown themselves to have a clear disrespect for the Church's faith and morals. 
"We take this measure as a last resort to respond to the accumulating harm caused by Pope Francis's words and actions over several years, which have given rise to one of the worst crises in the history of the Catholic Church," the authors state. The open letter is available in DutchItalianGermanFrench, and Spanish.
Among the signatories are well-respected scholars such as Father Thomas Crean, Fr. John Hunwicke, Professor John Rist, Dr. Anna Silvas, Professor Claudio Pierantoni, Dr. Peter Kwasniewski, and Dr. John Lamont. The text is dated "Easter Week" and appears on the traditional Feast Day of St. Catherine of Siena, a saint who counseled and admonished several popes in her time.

The 20-page document is a follow-up to the 2017 Filial Correction of Pope Francis that was signed originally by 62 scholars and which stated that the Pope has “effectively upheld 7 heretical positions about marriage, the moral life, and the reception of the sacraments, and has caused these heretical opinions to spread in the Catholic Church,” especially in light of his 2016 exhortation Amoris Laetitia
The authors of the open letter state in a summary of their letter (read below) that it has now become clear that Pope Francis is aware of his own positions contrary to the faith and that the time has come to go a "stage further" by claiming that Pope Francis is "guilty of the crime of heresy.”
In light of this situation, the authors call upon the bishops of the Church to take action since a "heretical papacy may not be tolerated or dissimulated to avoid a worse evil.”

For this reason, the authors “respectfully request the bishops of the Church to investigate the accusations contained in the letter, so that if they judge them to be well founded they may free the Church from her present distress, in accordance with the hallowed adage, Salus animarum prima lex (‘the salvation of souls is the highest law’). The bishops can do this, the writers suggest, “by admonishing Pope Francis to reject these heresies, and if he should persistently refuse, by declaring that he has freely deprived himself of the papacy.”

The authors first present in detail – and with theological references to substantiate their claims – the different positions against the faith Pope Francis has shown himself to hold, propagate, or support, including “seven propositions contradicting divinely revealed truth.” 

One of the heresies the authors accuse Pope Francis of committing is expressed in the following proposition: “A Christian believer can have full knowledge of a divine law and voluntarily choose to break it in a serious matter, but not be in a state of mortal sin as a result of this action.” Many of these heretical statements touch on questions of marriage and the family and are to be found in Amoris Laetitia, but there is also a new claim made by Pope Francis in 2019 – namely, that the “diversity of religions” is “willed by God” – that is listed in the open letter. 


3 comments:

  1. The whole letter is worth reading. (I recommend the balanced critique of it found in the Monyhan Letter website).
    Besides his ambiguous treatment of the sin of adultery and associated sacrilegious reception of the eucharist, it goes on to address the issues that Pope Francis caused in signing an agreement with Muslim clerics agreeing "that God wills a diversity of religions" is publicly endorsing indifferentism.
    At the same meeting, the Pope prostrated himself and kissed the feet of Muslim clerics, which negates Catholic teaching of the Trinity, and that Jesus Christ was incarnate to die to take away the sins of the world, and that He rose from the dead.
    They also decry the pope's appointment of known pedophiles and bishops who concealed homosexual and pedophile activities of those for whom they were responsible denies church teaching that these activities are disordered, sinful, and scandalous.

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  2. Hmmmm... if the pope does not reject his heresies the bishops can declare “that he has freely deprived himself of the papacy.”

    This is getting VERY interesting.

    As always, Scott, thank you for your hard work on this blog for all of us watchers out here in internet land. We’re quieter these days, but we still check in every day and appreciate what you do for us!

    Hope to see you in the air SOON!

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  3. Hi Alice - thanks so much! (Sorry I missed this earlier - my notification of comments isn't working yet again....) - and oh yea, hoping for the same :))

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