A Defense of Conciliar Popes / Mentevacantism: Eleison Comments by
Bishop Williamson
Conciliar Popes I
The world has always known bad
Popes, but never as in today’s world more corrupt than ever.
Whenever the claim is put forward
that the Conciliar Popes may be at least partly in good faith, there are
usually Catholics that protest. They will say that the Popes are intelligent
and educated churchmen, so it is impossible that they do not fully realize what
they are doing. The “mentevacantist” theory, according to which these Popes
have vacant minds, partly ignorant of the consequences of their own actions, is
for these critics absurd. One can understand the protest, but let me quote a
friend who understands “mentevacantism” as it needs to be understood:—
“The
idea that Popes can be mistaken in good faith because they hold that certain
errors are not opposed to the Faith, gets little serious attention, because
people have a concept of the papacy too detached from the world, whereas the
whole history of the Popes is a history of men of their time being liable to
share in all the good and bad habits and vices of their time. The difference
lies in the power of the error, which has never been so mighty as it is today,
mankind never having been, as one must not forget, so degenerate as today.
“For
indeed liberalism is now everywhere and it is overwhelming, no longer a mere
thought, or way of thinking, but a very way of being that permeates every man
alive, be he an absolute liberal in himself, or an agent of liberalism and its
subversion, or merely one of its tools. Such is the case of the Conciliar
Popes. They think they are drawing close to the world to heal it. They do not
realize that it is the world which is drawing them to itself to infect and
control them.
“In
such a situation as this, one can certainly speak of liberal Popes but not of
non-Catholic Popes, insofar as there is lacking the prime requisite for such a
condemnation, namely the personal will on their part to be liberals and not
Catholics. All one can do is recognize the fact that in these Popes there is
the personal will to be Catholics and not anti-Catholic liberals, since for
them there is no contradiction between the two, far from it. According to their
theologian and thinker, Joseph Ratzinger, liberalism is one of the good
by-products of Catholicism, needing only to be cleansed of certain alien
distortions imported into it. And so as for destroying the Church, it stands to
reason that Popes believing in such a compromised Catholicism cannot help one
of the consequences of their actions being the destruction of the Church.
“Concerning
Archbishop Lefebvre, given that he grew up in a Church quite different from
today’s Church, I can only conclude that for him it was impossible for a
Catholic acting as an instrument of subversion not to realize what he was
doing. Still less could a Pope not realize. From reading between the lines of
certain of the Archbishop’s writings, I do believe that while his vision of the
world certainly included the process of degeneration reaching down to the end
of time, it did not include that process involving in any clear manner the
Church as well.”
I can just hear readers objecting
to this kind of analysis: “Oh, Excellency, please stop defending the Conciliar
Popes. It’s black or white. If they’re black, I’ll be a happy sedevacantist. If
they’re white, I’ll be a happy liberal. Your greys do nothing but confuse me!”
Dear reader, black is black, white
is white, but rarely in real life do we find pure white, and never pure black
(whatever is, has the goodness of being). If you want to understand this
relative excusing of the Conciliar Popes, the key is to grasp that the world
has never been so deeply bad as it is today. From this unprecedented degeneracy
it is obvious that Conciliar Popes are in this respect more excusable for going
astray in the Faith than any of their predecessors.
Kyrie eleison.
Kyrie eleison.
Source: OPERATION SURVIVAL .ORG
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