Book CoverRighteous anger of faithful Catholics mounts...

 

Michael Rose’s book Goodbye! Good Men providentially appeared in print at just the right time, prior to what Inside the Vatican magazine has called “the scandal of the millennium.”  Rose’s book has placed a spotlight on the abominable state of U.S. seminaries, as well as the incompetent bishops and rectors who run them.

 

More and more information is now coming to light. Recently, the Dallas News compiled a database listing cover-ups (by diocese) throughout the United States. (Read more…)

 

In a vain attempt at damage control, liberals are now whining about the mounting “anger” of faithful Catholics. Take this post by

 

This failure to listen has made many Catholics angry, and rightfully so. But anger cannot be what motivates us, if we claim to be followers of Christ. I think that among many Catholics their anger is in danger of blinding them and drying up their charity. That leads to injustice. And injustice in one direction does not make up for or compensate for injustice in another.

 

Fr. Johansen is clueless on several points: (1) righteous anger has a God-given and positive role, (2) righteous anger does not blind, but motivates to action in order to overcome a great evil, (3) righteous anger does not dry up charity. Rather, it is charitable and just to resist evil and protect the innocent. Were a person to fail to act when faced with a great evil, that person would not be charitable, but a coward.

 

The role of righteous anger

Anger is one of the 11 passions (also known as emotions) that God has equipped us with. A person must have the perfection of all the 11 passions in order to be completely moral, and that includes the passion of anger. A person must be able to feel the emotion of anger to be moral, because otherwise a person could not easily resist a great evil.  The passion of anger is governed by the virtue of fortitude.

 

If a person is unable to feel a justified anger, there is something wrong.

 

When a great good is at stake, and the good is difficult to obtain or to preserve, this calls for spiritual combat. Here is where the moral virtue of fortitude is especially visible and, when necessary, righteous anger. The two basic acts of fortitude are endurance and attack. Concerning endurance, St. Thomas Aquinas says that “enduring comprises a strong activity of the soul, namely, a vigorous grasping of and clinging to the good.”  Also, “The brave man not only knows how to bear inevitable evil with equanimity; he will also not hesitate to ‘pounce upon’ evil and to bar its way, if this can reasonably be done. This attitude requires readiness to attack, courage, self-confidence, and hope of success….” (Josef Pieper, The Four Cardinal Virtues, p. 132)

 

Josef Pieper sums up the error that Fr.

 

“The fact, however, that [St.] Thomas assigns to (just) wrath a positive relation to the virtue of fortitude has become largely unintelligible and unacceptable to present-day Christianity and its non-Christian critics. This lack of comprehension may be explained partly by the exclusion, from Christian ethics, of the component of passion (with its inevitably physical aspect) as something alien and incongruous—an exclusion due to a kind of intellectual stoicism—and partly by the fact that the explosive activity which reveals itself in wrath is naturally repugnant to good behavior regulated by ‘bourgeois’ standards. So Thomas, who is equally free from both these errors, says: The brave man uses wrath for his own act, above all in attack, ‘for it is peculiar to wrath to pounce upon evil. Thus fortitude and wrath work directly upon each other.’” (Josef Pieper, The Four Cardinal Virtues, p. 130)

 

Faithful Catholics are now “pouncing upon” the evil ones in the Church. More power to them. 

 

St. Paul, when he was struck on the mouth by command of the high priest, did not remain passively silent but boldly said, “It is God that will smite thee for the whitened wall that thou art; thou art sitting there to judge me according to the law, and wilt thou break the law by ordering them to smite me?” (Acts 23:3) 

 

Christ displayed righteous anger when the Pharisees tried to trap Him in His words: “And looking about on them with anger, being grieved for the blindness of their hearts” (St. Mark 3:5). With righteous anger and zeal, Christ threw the moneychangers out of the temple: “And when He was entered into the temple, He began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the chairs of them that sold doves… And he taught, saying to them: Is it not written, My house shall be called a house of prayer to all nations? But you have made it a den of thieves.” (St. Mark 11:15,17)

 

To say that it is un-Christian to be angry is a lie; Christ has shown us Himself many examples of righteous anger.

 

What is happening now is a display of righteous anger among faithful Catholics, and this is a very beautiful thing, something to rejoice in.

 

Directives from Heaven...

D 63 -  Third Secret
D129 - THIRD SECRET EXPLAINED: PART 1 - 666 in Rome  
D130 -
THIRD SECRET EXPLAINED: PART 2 - Satan entered the Church in 1972  
D131 -
THIRD SECRET EXPLAINED: PART 3 - Satan entered the highest realms of the hierarchy  
D132 -
THIRD SECRET EXPLAINED: PART 4 - There shall be bishop against bishop and cardinal against cardinal, as satan has set himself in their midst.  
D133 -
THIRD SECRET EXPLAINED: PART 5 - The Apocalypse / Revelations
D161 - The Great Apostasy

D174 - Homosexuality, Part 2  New
D175 - Defilement of the Young  New
D176 - Sodom and Gomorrah  New
D177 Seminaries New

Articles…

Fatimagate
http://www.tldm.org/FatimaGate.htm

Links…

Dallas News database: Catholic bishops and sex abuse
http://www.dallasnews.com/cgi-bin/2002/priests.cgi

Dallas Diary, Part II, National Review, June 16, 2002
http://www.nationalreview.com/dreher/dreher061402.asp

Bishops betraying the Catholic Church, WorldNetDaily, June 14, 2002
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=27962

An Open Letter to our Bishops in Dallas, Phil Brennan, June 14, 2002
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/6/11/174259.shtml

Bishops castigated by victims, leaders alike, Minneapolis Star Tribune, June 14, 2002
http://www.startribune.com/stories/1697/2902391.html

Report: 111 Bishops Kept Priests, Others Accused of Abuse on the Job, Fox News, June 12, 2002
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,55076,00.html

U.S. Catholics worry for future, BBC News, June 13, 2002
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1944000/1944738.stm

Victims Have 'Heartbreaking' Meetings With Roman Catholic Bishops on Abuse Panel, Fox News, June 13, 2002
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,55085,00.html

| Home | Introduction | Prophecies | Directives | Order Form | Testimonies | Veronica | News | Photos | Bible | Magazine | Newsletters | Radio Show |

We encourage everyone to print or email copies of this web page to all the Bishops and all the clergy.  Also, send this page to as many people as possible.

The electronic form of this document is copyrighted.    http://www.tldm.org
Copyright © These Last Days Ministries, Inc. 1998 - 2002   All rights reserved.
P.O. Box 40
Lowell, MI 49331-0040
Revised:
August 23, 2018