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RaphaelJ
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Hello. Is it true that the last words of John XIII were to stop the council? If so, it would be disappointing because I believed that Pope Francis canonized him for the opening of the council.
(You mean John XXIII.)Hello. Is it true that the last words of John XIII were to stop the council? If so, it would be disappointing because I believed that Pope Francis canonized him for the opening of the council.
I always liked St Pope John XXIII since I learned he devoutly recited the entire 3 decades of the Rosary daily and now I have renewed affection for him.Hello. Is it true that the last words of John XXIII were to stop the council?
I believe that was only one of the reasons cited.… I believed that Pope Francis canonized him for the opening of the council.
That might be a moot point if it were his last words, as a council is automatically closed upon the death of the Pontiff.Is it true that the last words of John XIII were to stop the council?
Why the rolleyes?I always liked St Pope John XXIII since I learned he devoutly recited the entire 3 decades of the Rosary daily and now I have renewed affection for him.![]()
There is no reference whatsoever in Dr Warren Carroll’s *The Crisis of Christendom *in his A History of Christendom, Vol.6, to such an unlikely remark from St John XXIII.RaphaelJ #1
Is it true that the last words of John XIII were to stop the council?
Very doubtful.Hello. Is it true that the last words of John XIII were to stop the council? If so, it would be disappointing because I believed that Pope Francis canonized him for the opening of the council.
A Dominican priest, who has since gone to his reward and who was in a position to know things like this, told me it was true.Hello. Is it true that the last words of John XIII were to stop the council? If so, it would be disappointing because I believed that Pope Francis canonized him for the opening of the council.
It has nothing to do with “rad trads”. I was told the same story by a priest very much in communion with the Church and connected with the Vatican.That would kind of put the rad trads in a dilemma, wouldn’t it? They have been spreading the story that he was a secret Mason elected to destroy the Church and now they are supposed to believe that he actually opposed the Council?
Well, he didn’t sign any Vatican II documents and didn’t make any long range council plans, such as housing for the bishops. I wouldn’t read any more into that, though.they are supposed to believe that he actually opposed the Council?
I can see why posters might conjecture about what might have been said or done. It can be fun. The problem is when people circulate their conjectures, they tend to get repeated and linger in people’s minds much more that the actual things the pope definitely said and wrote; I have heard people repeat stuff from Dan Brown’s books as if his “facts” were on the same level as the Bible and Early Church Fathers. They may not remember that these “facts” came from novels, but keep repeating them. That kind of repeating does damage because it draws people away from the better sources of truth.commenter
Great post #15. It seems that more amd more people are using these forums for idle gossip rather than for evangelising and reevangelising.
I really find the label “rad trads” offensive. By what criteria do we define the faith of others as radical?That would kind of put the rad trads in a dilemma, wouldn’t it? They have been spreading the story that he was a secret Mason elected to destroy the Church and now they are supposed to believe that he actually opposed the Council?
You’re exactly right. There is really no need to spread unsupported hearsay from one’s deathbed when the 62 Missal and Veterum Sapientia alone already speak volumes.This pope wrote a great deal and spoke a great many things of which we have direct confirmation from the time he spoke them. Please reference that body of communication if you want to refer to this pope.