Lisi Sterndorfer

« With Pope Francis, a process of arbitrary intervention in multiple institutions of the Catholic Church began.
Some have been forced to make statutory changes that no one requested, despite the fact that they were peacefully carrying out their spiritual and apostolic life within the Church.
Others were victims of the appointment of pontifical commissioners, an evil interventionist phenomenon that followers of these ecclesiastical matters refer to pejoratively as comisariamiento.
There are also institutions that have been victims of direct dissolution (forced extinction), with utter disregard for the future of hundreds or thousands of members of excellent conduct and good faith who were part of them; faithful who for decades of their lives lived their vocation happily... until Pope Francis' arrival on the papal throne.
In addition to this, there were closed seminaries, canceled ordinations, cloistered religious threatened in the essence of their very millennial charisms (with houses arbitrarily commissariated), plus a huge number of priests cunningly canceled, or expelled from the ministry... and even excommunicated, and almost a hundred bishops scandalously expelled from their dioceses without cause.
All these victims of the arbitrariness of the previous pontiff, under the reign of Leo XIV, remain excluded from the ecclesiastical judicial system without being able to exercise a fair defense that would allow them to return to the regular exercise of their own vocation (as if there were a surplus of priests in the church). »

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Towards the Francis Dream of an Extermination of Opus Dei?

When Summorum Pontificum was promulgated, we had great hopes for a liturgical renewal of Opus Dei, the particular order founded by Josemaría Escrivá and later transformed in the only Personal Prelature, a novel figure created (for them, apparently) in the new Code of Canon Law.
We knew many priests of "The Work" loved the Traditional Mass, that Escrivá celebrated until the end of his life. But the order from above, as far as we could discern, was that the priests of Opus should, whenever possible, refrain from the Traditional Mass, and celebrate "the mass of the pope," that is, the novus ordo promulgated by Paul VI.
All this exaggeration of papal imitation did not serve Opus too well when Francis came. They never said or did anything against him, but, as we know, when Francis did not like something, the attitudes of others mattered little. And he didn't like Opus Dei, and that was that. So, he initiated a wholesale dismantling of the juridical structure of the Prelature, under the …

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