Antipope Francis laying a wreath at grave of Zionist Theodor Herzl
IF Jorge Bergoglio were a true pope and not a scandalous heretic, what would be the purpose of a visit to Jordan and Israel, such as the one he concluded yesterday? There would be only one purpose: To seek the conversion of both Muslims and Jews so that this blood-drenched region has some hope of peace.
But if the Argentinian Bomber sought to convert, he had a strange way of going about it. For he seemed only to affirm Muslims and Jews in their disastrously erroneous beliefs. He spoke admiringly of “three great monotheistic religions,” as if it were possible for contradictory religions to be true and as if the outrageous denial of Christ and his Sacred Humanity by Jews and Muslims (yes, Muslims do deny Christ) amounted to nothing. He praised the Jews as God’s “people,” as if the Incarnation had never happened and the Covenant with the Hebrews were still alive. And he invited Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Shimon Peres both to join him in prayer at the Vatican as if they were all worshipping the same God. How much further can the world sink than this indifferentism, which is so conducive to worldwide atheism and international strife?
Francis blathered on, of course, about religious freedom:
Religious freedom is in fact a fundamental human right and I cannot fail to express my hope that it will be upheld throughout the Middle East and the entire world. The right to religious freedom “includes on the individual and collective levels the freedom to follow one’s conscience in religious matters and, at the same time, freedom of worship… [it also includes] the freedom to choose the religion which one judges to be true and to manifest one’s beliefs in public” (Ecclesia in Medio Oriente, 26). Read More »