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  • Pope Francis' Tutti Frutti

    With the world focused on the Trump 2020 election, Hunter Biden's laptop, and the communist Chinese "Rona" virus the pope somehow decided he had something important to say. In the cathylick world these periodical musings are called "Encyclicals". It's hard to say just where these "inspirations" come from, but in this case it's looking more like the pope decided to take up mushroom cultivation without propier training - which means it's time for another issue of pope watch.

    From a church elder such as myself, it sounds much like the weed smoking hippie flower children attending a rain drenched Woodstock rock concert at a dairy farm in Bethel, New York - with the attendees groveling for days in mud and filth.

    Of course the important questions of the day with regard to Vatican doctrine are not answered - is the new wafer going to be avocado toast and what is the new policy with regards to transgender altar boys?

    Fratelli Tutti: Glory to Man in the Highest
    News: Commentary
    by Jules Gomes - ChurchMilitant.com - October 12, 2020

    Francis' encyclical 'full of sound and fury signifying nothing'

    Bad writers need good editors. Pope Francis needs a good plumber. The drains at Santa Marta have sprung a titanic leak. Fratelli Tutti's 43,000 words are flooding St. Peter's piazza, and Grzegorz Brzęczyszczykiewicz — the Vatican's elite Polish plumber — is as discombobulated as a plummeting parachutist whose ripcord is tangled in the zip of his trousers.

    Fratelli Tutti, Francis' latest encyclical, is a veritable bacchanalia of verbosity. It is longer than Jeremiah — the Bible's longest book. Jeremiah (and his redactors) stand up, speak up and shut up using 22,285 Hebrew words. Pope Francis' ink bottle runneth over. He pounds his keyboard to a pulp. He almost doubles Jeremiah's feat. It is finished!

    The Church's longest encyclical emerges from the bowels of the Vatican like Leviathan, the mythical sea monster, in the book of Job: "Can you draw out Leviathan with a fishhook, or press down its tongue with a cord? Can you put a rope in its nose, or pierce its jaw with a hook?"

    Or, as Holofernes puts it well in Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost: Pope Francis "draweth out the thread of his verbosity finer than the staple of his argument."

    As the Catholic chattering classes plod through the painfully ponderous prose of the encyclical's dense verbiage, Job offers a nugget of wisdom in interpreting Francis' Leviathan: "Any hope of capturing it will be disappointed; were not even the gods overwhelmed at the sight of it?"

    St. Paul wrote his first letter to the Corinthians when the embryonic Church in Corinth was drowning in a whirlpool of words. The diarrhea of words from a sect nicknamed the Sophists was resulting in a constipation of theology. The Sophist sect was preaching a skewed spirituality using "words, words, words" — as Hamlet would reply to Polonius.

    The Corinthian Christians, according to recent New Testament scholarship, were imitating the Sophists and invalidating the power of the Cross of Christ by substituting humanistic "wisdom" for the "wisdom of the Cross."

    Like Pope Francis, the Sophists were "inebriated by the exuberance of their verbosity" and sang the humanistic chorus of "Glory to man in the highest."

    The humanism of the Sophists was based on the philosophy of Protagoras which elevated "man as the measure of all things."

    "About the gods," wrote Protagoras, "I am unable to know whether they exist or do not exist, nor what they are like in form, for there are many things that hinder sure knowledge — the obscurity of the subject and the shortness of human life."

    Fratelli Tutti echoes Protagorean humanism with fatuous phrases like "shared humanity," "common humanity" and "new humanity" punctuating the encyclical like counterpoints in a Bach toccata and fugue.

    But, as reported in Church Militant, "the pontiff does not mention 'salvation' or the uniqueness of Jesus and his salvific work on the Cross even once in the eight chapters of his encyclical."

    Francis is pushing the "naïvely optimistic" idea of a coming kingdom which is "all fulfillment of promise without judgment," in the words of ethicist H. Richard Niebuhr. Francis' new humanity has a "one-sided view of progress which sees the growth of the wheat but not that of the tares, the gathering of the grain but not the burning of the chaff."

    The gospel of Fratelli Tutti is the good news of "a God without wrath who brought men without sin into a Kingdom without judgment through the ministrations of a Christ without a Cross," as Niebuhr prophetically thundered in his book The Kingdom of God in America.

    St. Paul would respond to the folly of Sophistry and the fatuousness of Fratelli Tutti with his proposition: "For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel; not in word of wisdom, in order that the Cross of Christ should not be emptied/made void/rendered futile."

    The Apostle declares what he considers "of first importance" — "that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures."

    Sophistry was dividing the Corinthian church because its peddlers were puffed up with pride. Russell Kirk, in his book The Roots of the American Order, suggests that it was Sophistry that sounded the death knell of Greek civilization.

    The handmaiden of verbosity is pomposity. In Fratelli Tutti, verbosity and pomposity kiss with no masks on like Pope Francis and the Grand Imam Ahmed al-Tayyeb in passionate embrace.

    Bergoglio quotes himself ad nauseam — more often than he quotes Jesus, the Bible, or previous popes. The encyclical cites 292 non-biblical sources in 288 footnotes. Of these, 172 come from his own writing. Francis, the pontiff of ecology, reminds us so often how he loves hearing the melody of creation. He also loves hearing the cacophony of his own voice.

    The pontifical pomposity is also reflected in Francis' arrogance in interpreting other religions: "The commandment of peace is inscribed in the depths of the religious traditions that we represent," he asserts, and "religious violence" is a result of "a deviation from religious teachings" and "a political manipulation of religions."

    The Grand Panjandrum even has the gumption to "cancel" the Bible on the death penalty, St. Augustine on just war, and Pope Leo XIII on private property. "In the current pontificate, I submit, it has become simply impossible to square the Pope's statements with those of his predecessors," writes Phil Lawler, author of Lost Shepherd: How Pope Francis is Misleading His Flock.

    Fratelli Tutti is Francis' epitaph to a dying post-Vatican II Church of Nice that has substituted the logorrhea of psycho-eco-babble, cultural Marxism, Moralistic Therapeutic Deism and flatulent globalist UN-speak for the Cross of Christ.

    Amusingly, the Democrat party manifesto for the 2020 election matches the papal penchant for verbal diarrhea with a word count of 42,889 words.

    "The Christian church and Christian theology become relevant to the problems of the modern world only when they reveal the 'hard core' of their identity in the crucified Christ," wrote Jürgen Moltmann in The Crucified God.

    On this litmus test, Fratelli Tutti fails irredeemably. Francis, like the Sophists, has nullified the cross of Christ. Jesus the savior is redundant to the pope's project of "human fraternity."

    Without Christ, Fratelli Tutti is, in the words of Shakespeare, "a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

    At best, fleeting passages in this torturous opus magnum will be commended by Francis' flunkies for what the Germans call "Binsenweisheit" — politely translated as stating the bleeding obvious, e.g., "All too quickly, however, we forget the lessons of history." Really? I wouldn't have known this if the pope hadn't told me!

    At worst, Fratelli Tutti is, in the words of St. Paul to the Galatians, a "different gospel." And, exhorts St. Paul, "even if we or an angel from Heaven should proclaim to you a gospel contrary to what we proclaimed to you, let that one be anathema!"

    Hell's foundations quiver at the shout of praise;
    brothers, lift your voices, loud your anthems raise.
    ...and get off my lawn
    sigpic

  • #2
    Re: Pope Francis' Tutti Frutti

    That review commits every sin it identifies in the Pope's message. Verbosity is the handmaiden of pomposity, indeed. It doesn't say much about what the Pope wrote, however.

    Does anyone know what the encyclical says? I'm always ready for a good laugh.
    The Christian Right: The Only Right Way to Be a Christian!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Pope Francis' Tutti Frutti

      Originally posted by WilliamJenningsBryan View Post
      Of course the important questions of the day with regard to Vatican doctrine are not answered - is the new wafer going to be avocado toast and what is the new policy with regards to transgender altar boys?
      Oh, goodness me, dear Brother Bryan: I am sure that there is an answer to this somewhere, but from what I've observed over the years, and from what men of tell us, I don't think we will ever know the truth -- not from that Cathyolick organization. Why, it seems that they just make things up as they go along, much like modern art!


      Originally posted by WWJDnow View Post
      That review commits every sin it identifies in the Pope's message. Verbosity is the handmaiden of pomposity, indeed. It doesn't say much about what the Pope wrote, however. Does anyone know what the encyclical says? I'm always ready for a good laugh.
      Oh, yes indeed, dear Brother Now: how correct you are! And, this is the second such story regarding the pope that I've read today. An earlier article mentions the back-pedaling that the Vatican is doing, in an attempt to get the pope out of trouble for his remarks about those ridiculous and highly sinful same-sex "marriages". After an article of a couple of weeks' ago saying that the pope seemed to be "OK" with the same-sex travesty, now they are saying he was taken out of context. Context, my sore feet! He was just showing himself to be what we already know, in that he is a false prophet, a wolf in sheep's clothing, and now his henchmen are trying to smooth things over so as not to anger his flock!

      Matthew 24:24 " For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect."

      I'm including a quote from the article, followed by the link. Now, then, let's see what the pope has to say about this, and also about Brother Bryan's excellent message concerning the Vatican!

      "The Vatican says Pope Francis’ comments on gay civil unions were taken out of context in a documentary that spliced together parts of an old interview, but still confirmed Francis’ belief that gay couples should enjoy legal protections."

      The Vatican said Pope Francis' remarks were taken out of context but still confirmed the pontiff's belief that gay couples should enjoy legal protections.
      (Mrs.) Isabella White

      Hebrews 10:19 " Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by the of "

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      • #4
        Re: Pope Francis' Tutti Frutti

        Why does the Pope need to constantly be re explaining what he just said? Pastor Zeke does not do this. Pastor Zeke says plainly, "Here are sins. I am against these!" No further re explaining is necessary.

        The Pope should say, "Homerism is a sin. I am against homerism."

        The world figuratively throws flowers in the path of Pastor Zeke. It would do the same for the Pope if he would just strike a blow against sin.
        Isaiah 24:1-3 Behold, the LORD maketh the earth empty (2)...as the taker of usury, so with the giver of usury to him. (3) The land shall be utterly emptied, and utterly spoiled: for the LORD hath spoken his word.

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