[ 0 → 4] TrapCast Express [ 4 → 15] TrapCast Express, it's Monday, January 24th, 2022. [ 16 → 21] Bet you didn't know it, but today is World Communications Day. [ 22 → 27] And if there's one man who's got something to communicate, you can already guess who it is. [ 27 → 38] That's right, your favorite apostate from Buenos Aires, Jorge Bergoglio, also known by his moniker Pope Francis. [ 38 → 47] So he released a message today that was over 2,000 words in English on the topic of, ironically, listening. [ 48 → 55] I was scratching my head thinking, how is it that someone can speak so much about listening? [ 55 → 57] You know what would have really impressed me? [ 57 → 64] If, in order to make the point that we all need to spend more time listening, Francis had said, [ 65 → 67] and therefore I'm going to shut up today. [ 67 → 70] Now that would have actually been a powerful statement. [ 71 → 78] Instead, what we got was an insufferable message on the theme of listening with the ear of the heart. [ 79 → 83] And when I say insufferable, I mean insufferable. [ 84 → 87] For example, he spoke about the grammar of Christ. [ 87 → 94] He pointed to an openness of heart that makes closeness possible. [ 95 → 99] And he claimed that only amazement enables knowledge. [ 100 → 106] Further, he said that human beings are called to fully become what they are, [ 106 → 114] the image and likeness of God in his capacity to listen, to welcome, to give space to others. [ 115 → 117] Now, it would be wrong to say that God is not a person. [ 117 → 122] It would be wrong to think that Francis' Communications Day message only contained piffle. [ 122 → 123] Not at all. [ 123 → 125] In fact, much of what he said was just fine. [ 126 → 135] But as usual, the content of what he said was carefully custom-tailored to a promotion of his ideological agenda. [ 135 → 142] You know, listening for the sake of synodality, migrants, discernment, learning from others, etc. [ 142 → 143] The usual stuff. [ 144 → 147] His own hypocrisy in the matter, of course, doesn't exist. [ 147 → 150] It doesn't exactly help the credibility of his message. [ 150 → 152] For example, he writes that [ 152 → 171] Yeah, such lofty words. [ 172 → 176] Meanwhile, cardinals Raymond Burke and Walter Brandmuller [ 176 → 177] are still waiting. [ 177 → 180] They're still waiting to get an audience with the Frankster. [ 180 → 182] They've been waiting since 2016. [ 183 → 187] And, you know, they will be waiting until hell freezes over. [ 188 → 195] And that's because the first thing Francis would have to do in that audience is listen to them. [ 196 → 199] And what they have to say is something he does not want to hear [ 199 → 205] because it would expose his so-called apostolic exhortation of Morris Letizia [ 205 → 207] for the anti-Catholic fraud that it is. [ 207 → 215] It is, therefore, rather ironic that in his message for the World Day of Communications today, [ 215 → 216] Francis wrote, quote, [ 216 → 222] It is sad when even in the church ideological alignments are formed [ 222 → 227] and listening disappears, leaving sterile opposition in its wake. [ 228 → 228] Unquote. [ 229 → 234] What he wants, in fact, is a symphonic church. [ 235 → 237] Like I said, insufferable. [ 237 → 244] But, hey, in that message today, [ 244 → 250] Bergoglio lowered himself to recall an old, outdated, pre-Vatican II concept, [ 252 → 254] namely that of eternal salvation. [ 255 → 256] Remember that? [ 256 → 256] Yeah. [ 257 → 262] Usually he doesn't talk about it, but he doesn't mind bringing it up in this case [ 262 → 266] because here he can use it to promote his ideology. [ 266 → 267] So, for that... [ 267 → 273] For that, he's more than happy to point out the connection between listening and salvation, [ 274 → 278] just as he has no problem reminding you that you will be judged by God [ 278 → 283] on whether you fed the hungry, clothed the naked, and helped the poor. [ 284 → 290] Yeah, so he points to Luke 8, 15, where our blessed Lord explains the parable of the sower, [ 291 → 296] saying that it is not enough to hear the word of God, but one must also keep it. [ 296 → 297] Right. [ 297 → 298] Right. [ 298 → 299] Right. [ 299 → 300] Right. [ 300 → 301] That is very true. [ 302 → 306] The problem is with Francis' glaring double standard. [ 307 → 312] See, what Francis doesn't think is relevant to eternal salvation is such minor things [ 312 → 319] as worshipping the Holy Trinity, adhering to the Catholic faith, or practicing purity [ 319 → 321] in accordance with the Sixth and Ninth Commandments. [ 322 → 327] Remember what he said during an in-flight press conference on September 15th, 2021? [ 327 → 329] He said, quote, [ 329 → 334] The Lord is good and will save everyone, unquote. [ 335 → 336] What was the context? [ 337 → 340] Well, he was speaking about those who practice sodomy. [ 341 → 346] See, he wasn't speaking there about good listening or feeding the hungry. [ 346 → 352] Had that been the topic, he would have reminded you of God's judgment at the end of your life. [ 353 → 357] Likewise, Francis doesn't care what religion someone is. [ 357 → 361] Well, at least as long as one is not a real Catholic. [ 362 → 370] In 2019, he signed the Declaration on Human Fraternity, which says that God has willed [ 370 → 376] a diversity and pluralism of religions, just as he willed there to be different colors, [ 377 → 378] races, sexes, and so on. [ 379 → 386] And so it is no surprise that on October 5th, 2021, the fake pope proclaimed at an inter-religious [ 386 → 387] education conference at the Catholic Church. [ 387 → 389] At the Vatican, quote, [ 389 → 397] If in the past our differences set us at odds, nowadays we see in them the richness of different [ 397 → 401] ways of coming to God, unquote. [ 401 → 406] And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the false gospel of Vatican II. [ 407 → 413] Although the Second Vatican Council itself doesn't quite say that, you can definitely [ 413 → 417] find the seeds of that in there, which Francis and the post-consul, [ 417 → 424] Cellular Novels Ordo Magisterium, have simply developed now into full-blown apostasy. [ 425 → 430] Our blessed Lord told his disciples moments before his ascension into heaven, [ 431 → 438] He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be condemned. [ 439 → 441] That's Mark 16, 16. [ 442 → 445] And, of course, the Lord told his apostles at the Last Supper, [ 446 → 447] I am the way. [ 447 → 450] And the truth and the life. [ 450 → 453] No man cometh to the Father but by me. [ 454 → 456] That's John 14, 6. [ 456 → 462] So much for the richness of different ways of coming to God. [ 463 → 469] In other news, yesterday the Novels Ordo Church observed Sunday of the Word of God, [ 470 → 473] a feast introduced by Francis a few years back. [ 473 → 476] Nothing wrong at all with such a celebration. [ 476 → 480] If only it actually were what it claims to be. [ 480 → 483] Francis held a special Novels Ordo Mass in St. Peter's Basilica, [ 484 → 488] and boy did he let it rip in the homily. [ 489 → 495] He happily hijacked the occasion and turned what was supposed to be a sermon on the Word of God [ 495 → 500] into a tirade against his favorite enemies, traditionalists. [ 501 → 502] He blasted, quote, [ 502 → 505] the temptation to shut ourselves up. [ 506 → 509] In a religiosity reduced to external worship, [ 510 → 513] one that fails to touch and transform our lives. [ 513 → 519] This is idolatry, hidden and refined, but idolatry all the same. [ 520 → 520] Unquote. [ 521 → 523] Now, this is typical Bergoglio. [ 523 → 526] Everything is idolatry somehow. [ 526 → 534] But when a wooden statue of a naked pregnant woman is worshipped in front of his face in the Vatican Gardens, [ 534 → 535] he does... [ 536 → 537] doesn't think there's anything wrong with it. [ 539 → 545] Now, there's a lot that Francis says in that sermon that deserves some commentary, [ 545 → 550] but I think I may just save that for a blog post or perhaps for the next podcast. [ 551 → 558] In this episode, I want to focus on only one particular falsehood he states right at the beginning of his sermon. [ 559 → 561] Talking about the Word of God, he says, quote, [ 561 → 564] The Word is at the center. [ 564 → 565] It reveals God. [ 566 → 568] And leads us to man. [ 569 → 569] Unquote. [ 571 → 572] What idiocy! [ 573 → 576] Of course, the Word of God reveals God. [ 576 → 577] That much is clear. [ 577 → 582] But to say that it leads us to man is false and stupid. [ 582 → 586] But that is the Bergolian gospel of man. [ 587 → 592] For him, the ultimate purpose of religion is to make the world a better place. [ 592 → 595] It's about helping other people. [ 596 → 601] And granted, those are good things, but they're not the ultimate purpose of religion. [ 601 → 606] Nor are they the reason why God became man and died on the cross for us. [ 607 → 613] It should go without saying that God's Word leads us to God, primarily, [ 613 → 617] who created us and for whose sake we exist. [ 618 → 625] Our purpose in this life is to know, love, and serve God here on earth, [ 625 → 631] so that we will be happy with him forever in the next life in heaven. [ 632 → 641] In the last analysis, our existence has no other purpose than to attain that final end, [ 641 → 644] to be happy with God forever. [ 645 → 651] And yes, that very much includes love for our neighbor here on earth, [ 651 → 655] helping the poor, feeding the hungry, visiting the sick, [ 655 → 658] consoling the afflicted, and so on. [ 659 → 664] But if these works are to have any value in the sight of God, [ 664 → 666] if they are to benefit us eternally, [ 667 → 672] then all of these things have to be done for the love of God, [ 672 → 674] as a means to God. [ 675 → 678] And that requires the state of sanctifying grace, [ 678 → 684] which is not possible apart from the virtues of faith and hope. [ 685 → 690] Without faith and hope, there can be no supernatural charity. [ 691 → 693] That's why we read in Hebrews 11.6, [ 694 → 703] Now, without faith, there can be works of charity, sure. [ 704 → 708] An atheist can assist an elderly person as much as a Catholic can. [ 708 → 712] But only for the Catholic in the state of sanctifying grace [ 712 → 715] will this avail to eternal life. [ 715 → 718] Remember Mark 9.40, [ 719 → 735] And so, in this way, these actions, [ 735 → 738] all corporal and spiritual works of mercy, [ 738 → 744] are a means to God, who is the ultimate goal of our existence. [ 744 → 744] That. [ 745 → 747] Is what a Catholic would preach. [ 748 → 750] Not Francis, of course. [ 751 → 753] No, he turns all that on its head, [ 754 → 756] and makes God the means to man. [ 757 → 760] He wants you to be religious only, or primarily, [ 761 → 763] so that you will help other people. [ 763 → 766] He wants you to believe in God only, [ 766 → 768] so you won't fail to worry about the unemployed. [ 769 → 771] He wants you to listen to God's word, [ 772 → 774] just so you will go out and meet the marginalized. [ 775 → 779] And that's why he doesn't care if the people helping others [ 779 → 782] are atheists, or agnostics, [ 783 → 787] Buddhists, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Protestants, or Catholics. [ 787 → 790] That's why he doesn't care about converting anyone, [ 791 → 796] but only about encounter, and dialogue, and fraternal relations. [ 798 → 801] Bergoglio's goal is a paradise on earth, [ 801 → 803] just like the Communists. [ 804 → 805] Remember what the Catholic Church said, [ 805 → 807] Remember what the fake Pope said in his message [ 807 → 812] for the 107th World Day of Migrants and Refugees last year. [ 812 → 815] He drew on the image of the New Jerusalem [ 815 → 817] found in the prophet Isaiah, [ 817 → 820] and in the book of Revelation, the Apocalypse. [ 820 → 821] Here's what he said, [ 822 → 826] This is the ideal of the New Jerusalem, [ 826 → 830] where all peoples are united in peace and harmony, [ 830 → 834] celebrating the goodness of God and the wonders of creation. [ 835 → 837] To achieve this ideal, however, [ 837 → 842] we must make every effort to break down the walls that separate us, [ 842 → 845] and, in acknowledging our profound interconnection, [ 846 → 850] build bridges that foster a culture of encounter." [ 850 → 855] And so you see he presents the New Jerusalem [ 855 → 858] as a state of ideal natural happiness on earth. [ 859 → 862] What he doesn't tell you is that the New Jerusalem [ 862 → 864] described in Isaiah chapter 16, [ 865 → 868] is a prophecy of the Catholic Church. [ 868 → 872] And the New Jerusalem in chapter 21 of the Apocalypse [ 872 → 875] is an image of the eternal bliss of heaven. [ 876 → 878] Again, think supernatural. [ 879 → 882] God's Word has a supernatural end. [ 883 → 885] It leads us to God, not to man. [ 886 → 889] The New Jerusalem isn't about an earthly paradise. [ 889 → 894] The earthly paradise was lost thousands of years ago [ 894 → 895] when Adam and Eve, [ 895 → 897] Adam and Eve ate of the forbidden fruit. [ 898 → 899] And it's not coming back. [ 900 → 902] In fact, how this world will end [ 902 → 906] is described in 2 Peter 3, verse 10. [ 907 → 910] But the day of the Lord shall come as a thief, [ 910 → 914] in which the heavens shall pass away with great violence, [ 915 → 917] and the elements shall be melted with heat, [ 917 → 920] and the earth and the works which are in it [ 920 → 921] shall be burned up. [ 923 → 924] Again, that's 2 Peter 3, 10. [ 925 → 927] Strangely enough, ladies and gentlemen, [ 928 → 930] that is the kind of climate change [ 930 → 933] Bergoglio isn't concerned about. [ 934 → 936] Now, at this point, one may ask, [ 936 → 940] why Francis preaches a naturalist heaven on earth? [ 940 → 944] Why does this false pope preach an earthly paradise [ 944 → 946] as mankind's goal? [ 947 → 950] The reason is that if the end of man [ 950 → 953] is a happy natural existence on earth, [ 954 → 955] then it really, [ 955 → 958] doesn't matter what religion you use to get there, [ 958 → 960] as long as it gets you there. [ 961 → 962] And that, in turn, [ 963 → 967] allows for the dissolution of all religions, [ 967 → 971] which is exactly what interreligious dialogue is about. [ 972 → 974] Remember, Catholic prophecy, [ 975 → 977] and I mean Holy Scripture and sacred tradition, [ 978 → 980] I do not mean private revelations. [ 981 → 983] Catholic prophecy tells us [ 983 → 984] that eventually, [ 984 → 988] the Antichrist will reign over the entire globe [ 988 → 989] for a short time, [ 989 → 992] three and a half years, if I'm not mistaken. [ 992 → 996] The Antichrist will be welcomed by apostate mankind, [ 997 → 998] and especially by the Jews, [ 999 → 1001] who will accept him as their Messiah, [1001 → 1004] just as Jesus Christ, the true Messiah, [1004 → 1007] predicted in John 5, 43, [1008 → 1009] where he said, [1009 → 1011] I am come in the name of my Father, [1012 → 1013] and you receive me not. [1013 → 1016] If another shall come in his own name, [1016 → 1018] him you will receive. [1019 → 1022] But in order to get to that point, [1022 → 1024] in order to get just about the entire world [1024 → 1026] to accept the Antichrist, [1027 → 1030] all religions must first somehow be dissolved, [1031 → 1033] or at least be relativized [1033 → 1037] and brought under the umbrella of one super-religion, [1038 → 1041] which encompasses all of mankind in some way. [1041 → 1043] And that is where [1043 → 1045] all that fraternity stuff comes in [1045 → 1048] that Francis has been pushing for the last two years. [1049 → 1052] The idea is to unite all men [1052 → 1055] not under the banner of Christ the King, [1055 → 1058] but under the banner of human fraternity, [1059 → 1061] which is ultimately Freemasonry. [1062 → 1065] And that is why Francis continually talks about [1065 → 1070] religious differences as mere confessions and traditions, [1070 → 1073] to slowly teach people [1073 → 1076] that all religions are pretty much the same. [1077 → 1078] They believe in the same God [1078 → 1080] who wills all of them. [1081 → 1083] And they ultimately all have [1083 → 1087] the same doctrine of loving and respecting other people [1087 → 1088] and the environment. [1089 → 1092] And so we're all moving toward the same goal [1092 → 1094] of that earthly paradise. [1094 → 1096] It's just that we've all been raised [1096 → 1098] in these different faith traditions, [1098 → 1100] which are all equally legitimate [1100 → 1103] because they're all just different, [1103 → 1104] different expressions, right? [1104 → 1107] Different styles of the same thing. [1108 → 1109] Or, as Francis put it, [1110 → 1112] they're different ways of coming to God. [1113 → 1117] That is the ultimate apostasy. [1117 → 1121] And that is very fertile ground for the Antichrist. [1123 → 1125] And now, last but not least, [1125 → 1127] we've got two fun clips for you [1127 → 1129] from Michael Matt's latest episode of [1129 → 1131] The Remnant Underground, [1132 → 1133] released on January, [1133 → 1134] January 22nd, entitled [1134 → 1138] UK Cancels All COVID Mandates, [1138 → 1140] Globalist Pope Exposed. [1141 → 1143] No commentary will be necessary [1143 → 1144] for these two clips, [1144 → 1145] except to say [1145 → 1148] that you can lead a horse to water, [1148 → 1150] but you can't make it drink. [1151 → 1152] The lunatics of Davos, [1152 → 1155] they needed the moral authority of the Pope [1155 → 1158] to preach their gay, globalist, anti-gospel. [1158 → 1159] That's what they needed. [1160 → 1160] And guess what? [1161 → 1162] Francis was only too eager [1162 → 1163] to have a drink. [1163 → 1164] Hand it right to them. [1164 → 1166] He must be held responsible. [1166 → 1167] I believe he's an infiltrator, [1168 → 1169] and he needs to be stopped. [1169 → 1171] He's speaking in the name of us. [1171 → 1172] He's speaking in the name of our church. [1172 → 1174] He's speaking in the name of Christ himself. [1175 → 1177] He is giving the grace of Almighty God [1178 → 1180] to the demons at Davos, [1180 → 1182] and he needs to answer that. [1182 → 1185] We need to raise these charges against him. [1185 → 1187] And another one from the same clip. [1188 → 1188] People say, [1189 → 1190] well, you gotta pray for Francis. [1191 → 1192] You're right, we do. [1193 → 1194] I pray for Francis every night. [1195 → 1196] I pray for his conversion. [1197 → 1199] I pray that he becomes a Catholic. [1200 → 1203] Tradcast Express is a production of Novos Ordo Watch. [1203 → 1205] Check us out at tradcast.org, [1205 → 1206] and if you like what we're doing, [1207 → 1209] please consider making a tax-deductible contribution [1209 → 1213] at novosordowatch.org slash donate.