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Utilizing a question and answer format, the book’s authors argue the synodal process is rehabilitating old heresies and imposing a harmful radical progressive agenda on the Church.
VATICAN CITY — Cardinal Raymond Burke has congratulated the authors of a new book aimed at exposing the dangers they say are associated with the upcoming Synod on Synodality — a process he describes as a “revolution” that is causing the Church “grave harm.”
In their book, titled The Synodal Process Is a Pandora’s Box (it can be read free online here) and translated into eight languages, Julio Loredo de Izcue and José Antonio Ureta say the goal of their work, written in the form of a catechism of 100 questions and answers, is to denounce the “imminent danger of building a new Church, different from the Catholic Church as it has always existed.”
The authors are senior members of the Brazilian Plinio Correa de Oliveira Institute, a Catholic association that seeks to defend the pillars of Christian civilization threatened by de-Christianization in the West.
Loredo and Ureta view the Synod on Synodality, a three-year process that began in October 2021 and will conclude with two general assemblies in Rome (the first on Oct. 4-29 and the second next October), as a “revolutionary” process that “takes up old heresies repeatedly condemned by the magisterium.”
Continued below.
VATICAN CITY — Cardinal Raymond Burke has congratulated the authors of a new book aimed at exposing the dangers they say are associated with the upcoming Synod on Synodality — a process he describes as a “revolution” that is causing the Church “grave harm.”
In their book, titled The Synodal Process Is a Pandora’s Box (it can be read free online here) and translated into eight languages, Julio Loredo de Izcue and José Antonio Ureta say the goal of their work, written in the form of a catechism of 100 questions and answers, is to denounce the “imminent danger of building a new Church, different from the Catholic Church as it has always existed.”
The authors are senior members of the Brazilian Plinio Correa de Oliveira Institute, a Catholic association that seeks to defend the pillars of Christian civilization threatened by de-Christianization in the West.
Loredo and Ureta view the Synod on Synodality, a three-year process that began in October 2021 and will conclude with two general assemblies in Rome (the first on Oct. 4-29 and the second next October), as a “revolutionary” process that “takes up old heresies repeatedly condemned by the magisterium.”
Continued below.
New Book Warns of ‘Revolutionary’ Threat Posed by Synod on Synodality
Utilizing a question and answer format, the book’s authors argue the synodal process is rehabilitating old heresies and imposing a harmful radical progressive agenda on the Church.
www.ncregister.com