Canon Lawyer admits Opus Dei & Josemaria Escriva linked to Communism PLEASE INFORM YOURSELF OF THIS CULT WHICH SHOULD BE AVOIDED AT ALL COSTS.
________________________
OPUS DEI:
A STRANGE PASTORAL PHENOMENON
In this exclusive English translation of an article appearing in Le Sel de la Terre (No. 11), Nicolas Dehan probes the organization referred to as Opus Dei and its beatified founder, Josemaria Escriva de Balaguer.
This dossier concludes with a response from the Opus Dei, Mr. Dehan’s counter-response, and a commentary regarding the approbation of Opus Dei by the Catholic Church.
On May 17, 1992, a grandiose ceremony in St. Peter’s Square in Rome revealed to, and thrust upon the world a man’s name and that of his work, both up until then relatively unknown to the general public.
In the presence of 46 cardinals, 300 bishops and 300,000 pilgrims, John Paul II celebrated the Mass of beatification of Josemarie Escriva de Balaguer, founder of the Opus Dei.
For over sixty years, "God’s Work" has labored very discreetly, so much so that some of its opponents - and it does have some - have defined it as clerical Freemasonry.
Josemaria Escriva, who died in 1975, hurtled over the various stages of the beatification process and was pushed up to the altar with amazing speed: 17 years. Certainly, the media seized upon this sensational aspect of the event, so rarely seen in Church history. For instance, think of the time it took - 170 years - to define the heroic virtue of an authentic popular apostle like Louis-Marie Grignon de Montfort. Thus, logic based on Church history prompts attempting to discover a reason justifying the urgency surrounding the introduction of Msgr. Escriva’s beatification process, and its acceleration. His cause was opened in 1981, six years after his death. During the years of the process, the Opus Dei, which has no media antennae of its own, and conforming to its principle of discretion, reached its affiliates in the intellectual and professional classes through an annual Information Bulletin, addressed to select cadres. This private publication exalted the Spanish priest’s deep interior life and his apostolate; it reviewed and commented on his written and social work; it informed readers of the progress of his cause in the Roman Curia; and gave a brief overview of the Opus Dei’s expressions and its international activities. Although not much, this was enough to get and keep the attention of the Bulletin’s readers, who might be curious about, or interested in, restoring the social order upon spiritual foundations. Nothing written in this publication, a priori, arouses any suspicion of an orientation deviating from the traditional teaching of the Church. Thus, the reader faithful to Church teaching remains trusting. |
|||||||||||||||
The same Bulletin also serves as a remembrance for those who knew the apostolate and work, some decades ago, of another Spanish priest, Rev. Fr. Vallet. Information on the Opus Dei leads to comparing the two works, as well to deducing two facts:
The grand silence maintained by the Church on the missionary and social work of Jesuit Fr. Francois de Paule Vallet and, over these many years, the great amount of discretion enveloping Fr. Josemaria Escriva’s work, is enough to whet the curiosity, to incite lifting the veil by investigating all documentation on these works. Let us begin with what the Conciliar Church today exalts. |
|||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||
Historical The history of the Opus Dei has been investigated for several Spanish, Italian, German and French studies. We shall begin our investigation with the first French work aimed at the public, written by an Opus Dei member, recommended by its Information Bulletin, and titled The Opus Dei.[1] The author, Dominique Le Tourneau, who has a Ph.D. in canon law and a degree in economics, paints a 120-page, complimentary portrait of the Founder and an idealized exposé of the spirituality of The Work. It is an account without warts of the Opus Dei’s work and its ensuing fruits. The book was given the Nihil obstat and Imprimatur of the Archdiocese of Paris. The first chapter is devoted to the background and life of Josemaria Escriva, the founder: born in 1902 in Barbastro (Aragon, Spain), he is revealed as having been a precociously pious, as well as a sweet and generous person who, at sixteen, abandoned the idea of becoming an architect to enter the seminary. In 1922, the Archbishop of Zaragoza, Spain, named him superior of the seminary; he was 20 years old. At 23, he was ordained a priest. In 1927, in Madrid, he prepared for a doctorate in civil law, all the while plunging himself into intense, charitable work among the sick, the poor, and abandoned children. While on retreat in 1928,
|
|||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||
Fr. Escriva was only 26 years old when The Work was created. He was long on desire for action, short on experience, but: "Fully aware of the Opus’ spirit, aims, means and ends, the Bishop of Madrid had encouraged the Founder from the beginning, and had blessed his work."[3] This is the same bishop who, later, in June 1944, would ordain The Work’s first three priests, all of whom had been lay members of the Opus Dei. Fr. Escriva’s disciples say he was "inspired by God"; others thought he was "mandated by the hierarchy." Father preached retreats, recruited members, and organized his Work. He chose his priests for The Work from the ranks of his disciples. He spoke of having clearly seen, while celebrating Mass on February 14, 1943, the canonical solution: the ordination of lay members of the Opus. At that moment, "The sacerdotal society of the Holy Cross was born, representing in the Church a new pastoral and juridical phenomenon, the ordination of men with university degrees and engaged in a profession..."[4] In 1946, Fr. Escriva moved to Rome, was appointed a domestic Prelate by His Holiness in 1947, and received various appointments: member of the Pontifical Academy of Theology; consultor to the Congregation of Seminaries, etc. He toured the world, preached his doctrine, "sanctity through work," and died suddenly, in Rome, on June 26, 1975. Through reading issues of the Information Bulletin,[5] the reader develops an unsuspicious belief in the Opus, since each issue reports on the impressive record of the worldwide dissemination of "Msgr. Escriva’s doctrine," particularly through Camino (The Way), his only work published during his lifetime. First published in Valencia, Spain, in 1934, Camino is the Opus Dei’s veritable rule. Under the title, Consideraciones, the first edition of The Way appeared in 1934. Since then, 250 editions have been published in 39 languages, with sales of nearly four million copies. |
|||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||
Opus Dei’s spirituality: sanctification through work
If this proposition is not false, it is essential to know how to interpret this phrase:
"What took shape was a veritable pastoral phenomenon," writes Dominique Le Tourneau. In the 1920’s, the wind was favorable to novelties, echoes of which were found at all ecclesiastical levels. In the beginning of the century, modernism was condemned but not neutralized. Taking refuge in clandestinity, it flourished, fostering a climate of return to novelties, or of a favorable reception to them: liturgical change, pastoral novelties, the marriage of the Church and the world. The Opus Dei refutes 10 centuries of Tradition One of the next chapter’s subheadings, "The religious concept," is instructive:
After this quotation, which inspires amazement and uneasiness, the author outlines the horizon where he wishes to lead the reader:
The Opus Dei: liberalism’s new antenna After having disposed of the Church’s tradition, the Opus Dei prudently sets forth its doctrine’s spirit: The Opus Dei’s theologian’s following quotation sums it up:
Comparing the religious vocation in the traditional orders to the Opus’ vocation, the author quotes the founder:
To be more precise, and using progressivism’s now official vocabulary:
Dominique Le Tourneau remains imprecise as to the Opus’ spirituality, declared unambiguously lay by the transitory Pope. A thirty-page Spanish study, written by one Juan Morales,[16] very usefully completes the documents already studied here. The author bases his critique on seven works, all published by Rialp,[17] the Opus’ publishing house in Madrid. In his introduction, he does not hesitate to write that the Opus Dei is "a real Trojan horse at the heart of the Church." Through sections taken from texts written by Opus Dei members, and the quotations by Fr. Escriva cited by the authors themselves, Morales demonstrates that the latter had the lay spirit to such an extent that he based some of his proposals on a fundamentally anticlerical mentality. Morales quotes from Peter Berglar’s book, Opus Dei:
He also quotes Salvador Bernal in Monsignor Escriva de Balaguer:
As well, he says,
Juan Morales reports the work of another Opus Dei author, Ana Sastre, in Tiempo de caminar, who, speaking of the Opus Dei’s characteristics, writes,
Vasquez de la Prada, in El fundator del Opus Dei, says the same thing, recognizing that the spirit of the Opus Dei formerly qualified as being innovative and heretical, but is today ratified by Vatican II. He writes:
Vasquez adds:
This is an unvarnished admission of the upheaval of the Church’s traditional doctrine. The Opus’ new doctrine was ratified yesterday by the Council and glorified today by the beatification. Because we are not fools, [we must say that] the beatification is the integration of Opus’ principles into the conciliar Church’s doctrine. Opus members know, and have no compunction about this destruction of Tradition. In the book, Estudios sobre camino [Studies on The Way - Ed.], in a chapter titled, "A Silent Revolution," José Miguel Ceja makes this comment:
|
|||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||
On the Way of Fantasy, Utopia and Heresy
By this subtitle we allude to Fr. Garrigou-Lagrange’s judgment on the "new theology." Let us return to the work of Le Tourneau. In the paragraph discussing the Opus’ "great principles" on the sanctification of work, the author cites Msgr. Escriva:
Yet another novelty! This interpretation of the Bible is not the Church’s. Dom Calmet, Crampon, and nearly all of the exegetes translate this verse 15 from Chapter 2 of Genesis thusly: "The Lord God took man and placed him in the Garden of Delights to cultivate and take care of it." Not, God "created man in order to work," but "to know Him, to love Him, to serve Him and thus to obtain happiness in heaven," as the catechism has always taught. Throughout the centuries, the various religious orders and spiritualities within the Church have pursued this singular goal through different means. Certainly, work was one, but without it ever having been erected into an absolute value, as is attempted throughout the 130 pages of its codification by the Opus Dei:
Dominique Le Tourneau does his best to demonstrate that the universal way to health and holiness is the Opus’ discovery and prerogative:
Did we have to wait for Fr. Escriva and Vatican II to proclaim that holiness is not reserved to the privileged few? This is the constant preaching of the Church, Tradition, missionaries and preachers. This was what the founders of the various works of Catholic Action proposed long before the world snatched them up. Well before 1928, in order to facilitate and make sanctification available to all, Rev. Fr. Vallet, faithful to papal teaching, was preaching the necessity of the social royalty of Our Lord Jesus Christ, otherwise called the Christian social order. The counsel to search for sanctity is nothing revolutionary, it is perfectly traditional in Christianity. What is revolutionary is the modernist spirit which the Opus provokes by infiltrating societies, as we shall go on to verify, in order to create a lay mentality, completely contrary to the social kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ, a mentality which is effectively that of the Second Vatican Council. In a chapter on freedom, pluralism, and understanding others’ opinions, Msgr. Escriva says:
In the above, there are two questionable, debatable points which are illusionary, utopian and mistaken:
Since conscience has been lately defined by natural morality as the "interior sentiment by which man gives witness to himself as to the good and evil that he does" (Larousse), the winds of liberalism have completely deformed this ethic beyond recognition. Conscience, still claiming to be Christian, seduced by the world, arrives at its aggiornamento: it is now elastic and permissive. It allows today what was inadmissible yesterday. Examples abound. Thus, the Opus puts Christian conscience on a very long leash by allowing those with every viewpoint, of all religions, and even non-believers in its ranks, and above all, in its "corporate apostolic activities." Le Tourneau states:
These sentences are laden with meaning, power, and destruction. It is necessary to stop here. The Catholic solution is cast aside. Thus the door is open to every solution, all vaguely tinged with ecumenical religiosity. Meanwhile, pontifical documents reveal the solution to the social question, to the problems of work, to the social order, all of which were in circulation during the first years of the Opus Dei. The encyclicals Mens Nostra (December 20, 1929) and Quadragesimo Anno (May 15, 1931) are specific enough. The solution is Catholic. For example, Pope Pius XI declares that the Spiritual Exercises, in conjunction with retreats, are proper means for resolving the social question:
Let us again ask: Why, at the time of these clear pontifical directives, was Fr. Vallet’s work destroyed, especially since it conformed to this teaching? The internal disintegration of the Church had begun. The modernists installed in the Curia successfully surrounded and beat down St. Pius X’s faithful heirs, who were the artisans of the social kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Rev. Fr. Vallet was among these faithful heirs and his work was an excellent means for "restoring all things in Christ." Fr. de Balaguer’s fledgling work took a totally other direction through its being pushed and protected by Msgr. Eijo y Garay. We find this direction defined in our reference work’s Chapter IV, where its nature is presented in paragraph four, under the heading, "Corporate works of apostolate":
This is aberrant! It is the very apostolic mentality condemned by Popes Pius X, Pius XI, and Pius XII. "Moreover," continues Le Tourneau,
This professional and civil character between people of different religions and ideologies, with the same skills or same business, or in the same association, resembles an organization based on similar interests, such as a sports club, a theater troop, but in no way resembles an apostolic work. It is truly a tissue of contradictions; it is to desacralize apostolate, it is apostolate’s negation, as well as the negation of the propagation of the faith, whose mission is conversion; it is to pervert the very sense of the word apostolate. In Conversations with Msgr. Escriva de Balaguer, one is not astonished to read: "Long live students of all religions and all ideologies."[32] In the same document, he says, "Pluralism is not to be feared but loved as a legitimate consequence of personal freedom." This passion for freedom prompted Escriva to make some of the Opus’ residences inter-confessional. Thus freedom comes before the truth. The truth is an obstacle. Escriva is really the precursor, the inspiration and doctor of the new world order, whose working model we saw at Assisi. The Opus Dei is a contemporary modernist manifestation, and, as such, falls exactly under the sentence pronounced against modernism and reiterated by the magisterium, particularly by St. Pius X’s Encyclical, Pascendi Dominici Gregis, promulgated on September 8, 1907 and, more precisely, by his August 25, 1910 Letter on the Sillon, condemning these utopias:
There are numerous Opus Dei texts that are similar to those of The Sillon. Here then are some examples from our reliable authors:
Berglar, Vasquez, Sastre and others give details regarding the very friendly relations between Escriva and these cooperators from other religions, who were very good financial brokers for The Work; it was already an active and political ecumenism. Essentially, and in all areas, Escriva was a precursor. This is the mentality and conduct which Pius XI condemned in his 1928 encyclical Mortalium Animos, where he addressed himself to those who:
Yet, this is the way, "the spirituality which Msgr. Escriva has laid out in unaltered form since 1928,"[35] writes Dominique Le Tourneau, who quotes Card. Poletti:
This is really why, so quickly after Escriva’s death, i.e., on February 19, 1981, his beatification cause was introduced. On April 9, 1990 he was declared "venerable," and on May 17, 1992, he was beatified. Only a saint could cover and justify the acts of the Council, in order to authenticate them. An appraisal of Msgr. Escriva’s interior life and virtues is not within our ken. On the other hand, it is completely legitimate to cast doubt upon, and to refute, his revolutionary doctrine. Virtue and piety may not automatically confer doctrinal and pastoral orthodoxy. The approbation of Opus Dei - definitive or not? Without examining the detail of the criticisms (of the Nicolas Dehan article - Ed.), some of which are solid and others less so, it must be observed that they bear fundamentally upon the very conception of the work as intended by its founder, and expressed in its official publications. It must be observed - as is pointed out on p.139 (in the original Le Sel de la Terre version; p21 in this English translation from Angelus Press - Ed.). - that this work was officially approved by Pope Pius XII in 1947. Now, whatever may have been the maneuvers of Msgr. Montini (Pope Paul VI), it is theologically certain that the definitive approbation of a religious foundation (and there is no theological reason to hold otherwise for a secular institute) is covered by the Church’s infallibility... A letter from a reader published in Le Sel de la Terre, No. 13 Here is the commentary published in Le Sel de la Terre on the points raised:
Nevertheless it is necessary to understand it correctly. The approbation must be definitive. Was this the case with the approbation of 1947? It does not seem so, since modifications came about in 1950 (if there was a definitive approbation of the statutes, it was at this date that it was given); then in 1982 there was a significant modification of the juridical statute of the institute. But especially, the approbation must bear upon a religious order (cf. Zubizarreta, Theologia dogmatico-scholastica, Bilbao, 1947, vol. 1, p.420); for the Church is then infallible because she uses the means of sanctification given by Our Lord himself (the religious life). Yet, precisely, the Opus Dei refuses to be classed as a religious order, and demands that its special lay, secular character be recognized. One could point out as well that the infallibility of the Church only concerns the doctrinal judgment: this or that religious rule is apt to sanctify; but it does not concern the prudential judgment: it is prudent or opportune to accept this religious order (cf. Sacrae theologiae summa, B.A.C., vol. 1, 1962, p.724). If, and such does not seem to us to be the case, one demonstrated that the infallibility of the Church were engaged in this matter, one would still be free to criticize the Opus Dei and to demand its suppression for reasons of prudence (for example, this institute foments a liberal, conciliar mentality).
Opus Dei’s Internal Organization and Life The Opus is organized like a religious order, comprised overall of priests and laity. Entering the Opus is considered to be a vocation and there are a rule and vows,37 although married members take different ones. Here is how vocations are born:
The number of vocations has continually increased. In 1989 the Opus Dei had 76,000 members in 87 countries. In France, there are about 1,400 members with ten centers in Paris and 15 more provincial ones. Some "corporate activities" have been created there, i.e., a hotel training school in Aisne (France), youth clubs, meeting centers, residences for domestic employees, etc. By adorning its actions with the word "apostolate," the Opus Dei warps the general meaning of the term, understood in Catholicism as the propagation of the Faith. But this is exactly what it does not wish, what it does not do, and what it expressly forbids. It contradicts itself when it says: do the work of the Church and do not proselytize. But to which Church does this refer? The ecumenical Church? God’s Church? Assisi’s? The Opus Dei is a work which opens, as it describes, into "a fan." This is exactly correct, for it is everywhere at work. It possesses a prestigious international university, the University of Navarre, in Pamplona, Spain, created in 1952, which has faculties of law, medicine, philosophy, letters, pharmacy, the sciences, theology, a language institute, schools of architecture, economics and business, as well as a school of hospital work, etc. Over 40 years, 30,000 students have completed their studies at the University of Navarre. In 1988-1989, more than 15,000 were enrolled. In Spain, eight residences for high school students are attached to the University. Also part of the University is its 500-bed clinic. In 1988, more than 80,000 consultations were given there, and 12,000 patients admitted. This is only a sketch of what’s been done in Spain at the university level. There are similar universities in Peru and Colombia. We shall not list the full quotient of Opus’ worldwide works (Latin America, Australia, Japan, etc.). Knowing the Opus’ scope promotes understanding the reasons for its discretion, why it has been effective, and the methods of its success. Recruitment of members This is primarily carried out in the universities, schools, sports camps, clubs, and circles directed by The Work, all of which, in theory, are open to everyone; it is, in fact, also carried out in the intellectual and upper strata of society, among young high school and college students, in groups involved in academic, scientific, legal, military, medical, financial, commercial and political activities. In effect, this is Msgr. Balaguer’s "fan." Membership in Opus Dei There are four degrees of membership:
Despite its liberal doctrine, the Opus has been, and is, the object of critics and opposition coming from different points of view. It has been treated as clerical Freemasonry because of its hierarchical structure and the great discretion surrounding its members’ activities. It absolutely denies this. Secularists classify it as right-wing or conservative because of the members’ piety and social class. This too is denied. Traditionalists define it as modernist. The Opus’ doctrine, and its self-described "revolutionary" position, and its distance from the secular principles professed by the Church, the Fathers and the Doctors of the Church, have not prevented many Spanish bishops known as conservatives from offering their support to Msgr. Balaguer and his Work. In the 1970’s, among these were Archbishop Gonzales Martin, Primate of the Spanish hierarchy; Bishop Garcia Lahiguera, Archbishop of Valencia; or Bishop. Lopez Ortiz, Vicar of the Armed Forces. Others, such as the progressive Swiss theologian, Urs von Balthasar, accused them of perverting the Gospel through blind conformism, and of contemporary integrism unto theocracy. The critics of both extremes haven’t hurt them; on the contrary, they have made them the beneficiary of a reputation for moderation, for exemplifying the golden mean, conciliation and cohabitation. In Rome, modernist Rome, which has unceasingly cooperated with the Opus Dei, such a position of openness is much needed - that type of openness which attempts to satisfy some, the progressives, and to reassure others, the conservatives - after the failure and disorder engendered by the Council. The Opus Dei clergy is formed exclusively of priests who were former lay members of the Opus. The priests answer solely to the Prelate. In August, 1982, John Paul II constituted the Opus as a Personal Prelature. The Prelature’s jurisdiction embraces all of the members of the Opus worldwide. The current Prelate is His Excellency Alvaro del Portillo, one of Msgr. Escriva’s first collaborators. (Bishop Alvaro del Portillo died on March 23, 1994. Bishop Javier Echevarria was elected Prelate of Opus Dei on April 21, 1994, following Bishop del Portillo’s death. - English Ed.) Portillo was a civil engineer. In 1991, there were about 1,400 priests in the Opus. By way of example, here are some ordination facts:
In the recent past, about sixty Opus members had their priestly orders conferred on them by the highest authorities: Cardinal Koenig, Cardinal Oddi, Cardinal Etchegaray, and Pope John Paul II. This is proof of the grand and then grander pride of place taken by the Opus Dei in the conciliar Church. The priests of the Opus Dei are all aggregated into
The discretion and mystery enveloping the Opus Dei do not permit knowing who or where their most important and influential members are. What is certain is that their stock is high, by virtue of the important social and political positions that they hold in every country, in the intellectual and action capitals of the world, where the thinkers and the technocrats reign. Without being able to affirm their membership in The Work, one can at least say that some persons are known to be powered by the engine of the Opus: For instance, in France, there are politicians such as Maurice Schumann and Antoine Pinay; some members of the Academy such as Jean Guitton, and Professor Jean Roche of the Institute, Rector of the Sorbonne, who was made an honorary doctor by the University of Navarre in 1967; and [now deceased - French Ed.] Professor Jerome Lejeune who in 1974 received the same distinction from Msgr. Escriva de Balaguer.[40] February 2, 1947 was a great day for the Opus Dei. Rome published the constitution Provida Mater Ecclesia, providing the norms for the creation of secular institutes; on the 24th of the same month, the Opus received approval as a secular institute. As the first secular institute, the Opus was the first Catholic association to cooperate with non-Catholics and even with non-Christians. Why this act, contrary to doctrine, contrary to the thought and will of Pius XII? What we know today from archives which were opened, and from revelations written by intimates or disciples of Msgr. Montini (the future Pope Paul VI),[41] allow us to answer this question. We know how the substitute Secretary of State betrayed the actions and decisions and of his superior, the Holy Father. How? By falsifying his letters (in particular, a December 2, 1944 one by Blondel); by providing interpretations contrary to Pius XII’s directives (in particular, to Humani Generis, in 1950); by making contacts, as well as compromising and scandalous alliances without the knowledge, but in the name of Pius XII (among others, the 1942 secret Montini-Stalin accords). From Msgr. Montini’s now-known, disloyal conduct on so many occasions, it is not improbable to think, for example, that the decision to create secular institutes, which immediately benefited the Opus, was extorted according to the habitual practice of the disloyal servant. Under Pius XII, nearly twenty years before the "French Revolution of 1789 in the Church," the Catholic Church’s immutable and traditional doctrine was already changed through the filter of Msgr. Escriva’s Opus Dei, a useful instrument in the hands of Msgr. Montini for proselytizing, among the ranks of the international elite, the "new theology" condemned by Pius XII. Opus Dei’s doctrine We have already observed some of the doctrinal aspects. Above all, the Opus’ doctrine is transmitted orally to its members. However, it is written down for members’ use as a breviary in The Way, a compendium of 999 maxims. The Way exalts the dignity of the human person independently of religion. In Estudios sobre camino[42] [Studies on The Way], Msgr. Escriva’s successor comments:
In the same document, he reveals how the indoctrination was fashioned prior to the Council. Although hidden, this indoctrination was thoroughgoing, reaching well beyond the cadre of Opus initiates:
Thus is revealed a favored revolutionary mission, subsequently integrated by the modernist Church. This sums up the very effective Opus’ Father’s thinking on the self-destruction of the Church. Peter Berglar, quoted earlier here, relates some very important things which promote an understanding of the enormity of the crisis. Like a propagandist for the Opus Dei, Berglar writes:
The reader of The Way is deceived because, if the Opus exalts the lay mentality, The Way stifles the laity:
These are authoritarian principles, for internal use, which bear heavily on the spiritual life of these "religious-laity." Let us compare these maxims with some remarks, among many others, devised for public consumption, which give wide berth to fantasy and to bad habits on the subject of social doctrine. In doing so, we shall deduce the illogic so typical of the Opus Dei. During an interview granted to an American journalist, Msgr. Escriva declared,
The body of the Church’s social doctrine, which is especially rich as taught by Pius XII, does not seem to be the source of temporal conduct for the members of the Opus. Not even taken into consideration are the conciliar Church’s pontifical directives. When interviewed the day after the beatification, one Spanish Opus Dei spokesman[44] told a journalist from Courrier de l’Ouest,
A comparison between certain principles, written in an ostensibly traditional style, and the directives underlying the organization of "corporate apostolic works" resonates over and over again with the Opus’ internal contradiction. This encourages the view that it has two faces, as well as encourages some of its adversaries to say: It is Freemasonry. Le Tourneau does not conceal these accusations. Rather, he treats them in a short chapter where the following is found:
Later, Msgr. Escriva was accused before the Holy Office; however, this was after the Holy See had bestowed its definitive approval on the Opus Dei.[45] Salvador Bernal also reports that event in much the same terms.[46] The Opus Dei’s protests have not convinced the most informed. Dominique Le Tourneau spends a chapter on the Opus Dei’s defined and lived freedom:
Thus is seen that contrast between The Way’s maxims and the secret character imposed on Opus Dei’s members by their "constitutions." It is this contrast that supplies great amounts of grist for the Opus’ critics’ mill. These constitutions, certain articles of which were necessarily modified since the erection of the Opus Dei into a Personal Prelature in 1982, are the Work’s governing charter. Written in Latin, following is a translation of the most probative articles:
If prudence is always a good, is such secretiveness licit for a "work of God" aimed at the laity? Is such secretiveness compatible with apostolic mission? Here is conduct quite removed from the spirit of Pius XI’s encyclical, Quas Primas, on the universal kingship of Christ. The investigative study of Dominique Le Tourneau’s manual, The Opus Dei, which we just inventoried, finally leaves the reader puzzled as to know which page to consult in order to situate the Opus Dei, since so many are contradictory. However, it seems that Le Tourneau has painted this work’s true, two-headed portrait. And to those who have just placed The Work’s founder on the summit, we ask St. Pius X’s question: "What are they hiding, those who fear the light and the truth?" A critical work on the Opus Dei,[48] written by Arnaud de Lassus, makes a comparative study, which he calls, "the two images of the Opus Dei." The first one is its official identity, set forth for outsiders; the second is the conduct actually lived inside the Opus Dei. We quote one example taken from De Lassus’ comparisons:
Since De Lassus sheds light on the danger of the Opus Dei’s deceptive "apostolate," we quote this part of his text in full:
|
Tags:
Views: 617
These people are really OUT THERE :( If you belong to them get out because you are not working for Our Lord there. You are working exactly against Him.
Ditto the Legionaries of Christ which is very similar.
Yes Indeed!
I was not familiar with the Opus Dei until a few months ago. One of them tried to sign up here and went bannanas when I asked her if she still belonged to Opus Dei. She is a numerary in that cult. This set her off I guess and she made a post telling people to stay away from the Crusaders, we are evil, we judge who is Catholic yaddayaddayadda. All from asking her if she was still a member with them, which she is. Her Opus Dei priest Paul Nicholson came on to support her tirade....the same man who speaks vehemently against Fatima and has charged that Archbishop Lefebvre is in hell. A charge even the Church does not make on Judas Iscariot himself. These people freak me out. Cannon Hesse in the video above spells it out loud and clear just what exactly these people are made of and it ain't pretty at all.
Nicola Wansink said:
Ditto the Legionaries of Christ which is very similar.
Adding: I know she is a member of Opus Dei because she lost her temper one day on John Vennari's group against the canonization of Paul the VI. She in her anger let the cat out of the bag. He was about to get rid of her when she deleted herself.
We need a thorough cleansing of the Church from top to bottom and side to side and every nook and cranny in between.
Its not a wonder Benedict resigned, who could do battle, primarily alone, against so many evil factions who have so great a stronghold on the Church.
Thank you for sharing this with us. I thought this had all died off years ago but you have open my eyes for it has not left. Remember reading about this many, many years ago about Opus Dei and the pros and cons. There was so much confusion about it those years that I totally would not read any more about Opus Dei. I am glad that SSPX site has this article for all to read and know the truth.
Father Kramer posted this on my timeline. He said after he gave this interview, which I assume told it like it was about the Opus Dei [it's not in English] the lady in question blocked him. Kinda funny....
RE: The Above Video:
Paul Kramer Daniel Estulin and I exposed and unmasked Opus Dei as a pseudo-Catholic Conciliar sect which exists for its own self serving agenda of accumulating power & wealth. It's ministry serves its own organization. It does not serve the Church but is a parasitic organization like a vine on a tree.
© 2024 Created by Dawn Marie. Powered by