So downright ugly that I refuse to post a picture of
it.
If you haven’t seen it and are in a penitential mood,
google “Vatican Nativity 2020”, but I recommend it only on an empty stomach,
and, even so, only for a quick glance.
It’s best described as Alien meets Fisher Price.
Who decided this was a good idea? That this was what
the Catholic faithful in 2020 need?
Ugly is not the only adjective that comes to mind. Some
others are: disgusting, disgraceful, childish (though it will frighten small
children), hideous, post-modernistic, anti-Catholic / anti-Christian, blasphemous,
embarrassing – and on and on.
Now this leads me to the first great truth I’ve
realized this year.
The current occupants of the Vatican are not on your
side.
What do I mean by this?
Well, empirical evidence suggests that they don’t
believe in the teachings of the Church to which they belong.
Want some of that empirical evidence?
Okay. How about any Francis encyclical. How about the
whitewashing of the McCarrick report. How about the four-plus years of vigorously
ignoring the Dubia, five questions put to the Pope asking whether he upholds
traditional Catholic teaching in light of his first encyclical, Amoris Laetitia. How about the
head-scratching “theology” of dozens of Francis’s off-the-cuff remarks. How
about the placing of Pachamama idols in a Rome church in October 2019. How
about prior homoerotic Nativity scenes at the Vatican.
How about this year’s Nativity scene, an utter affront
to Our Lord and Our Lady, as well as to good taste. Uplifting it ain’t.
It’s tiresome. So tiresome.
Therefore I’ve realized that the Vatican is not on my
side. They make it more difficult to live as a Catholic and pass on the Faith
to my children.
So where does one turn?
This is my second great truth:
You turn to the 1,900 year tradition of the Church,
her writings.
I’ve read through the entire Bible this year (with the
exception of the Psalms, but I took that journey back in 2016). I’ve also begun
daily readings in my 1962 Missal. This has brought great comfort to me in these
trying times *. More comfort than the Vatican, or even my parish priest, has
offered.
I fully intend to continue in 2021. I have felt
“called” to read through the writings of St. Augustine. Aquinas, as the summit
of intellectual Catholic thought, has always been on my bucket list, but I fear
his writings too lofty for me at this stage of life. However, Augustine, sinner
as I, feels more down to earth to me, more practical, more approachable. I have
a tome of his on the shelf behind the writing desk I plan on cracking in early
January, and if all goes well, I may purchase some more for later. I have some
experience with his Confessions, City of God, and On Christian Doctrine, but all could use a focused re-reading.
After all, any pre-1965 spiritual reading is worth
infinitely more than the modernistic anti-Catholic claptrap coming from Francis
and his cabal of crony Cardinals. Augustine’s writing much, much closer to the
Crucified Christ, indeed almost at the foot of His Cross, than the Hippie
Picasso Jesus these post-Vatican II dinosaurs worship.
* Pandemic, scamdemic, mask mandates, the Media, the
Presidential Election, race riots, lockdowns, economic insecurity, the
Sovietization of the workplace … to name just a few.
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