12 July 2026

SSPX Prove From the Doctors and Saints the Excommunications Are Not Legitimate


When history and actual Catholic teaching disagree with Tucho Fernandez, there's a big problem.

What Was Marzipan? The Medieval Cure Apothecaries Sold Before It Became Candy

From Medieval Way


There is a drug in your Christmas box. You probably ate some of it last December, wrapped in gold foil, shaped like a little fruit or a smooth pale loaf. It is just sweet almond candy. At least, that is what you think it is. Because for most of its life, the soft almond paste we call marzipan was not a treat at all. It was a prescription. You did not buy it at a bakery. You bought it from an apothecary, the closest thing the medieval world had to a pharmacy, and you ate it because a physician told you it would make you well. Today a single company in the German city of LΓΌbeck turns out around thirty tonnes of the stuff a day in the run-up to Christmas. Thirty tonnes. Of a former medicine. This is the story of how a drug quietly became a dessert, and how almost nobody noticed the moment it changed.

Traditional Catholic Morning Prayers in English | July


Traditional Catholic morning prayers to help start your day in a godly way! The month of July is dedicated to the Most Precious Blood of Jesus. May our devotion to the salvific action of the Precious Blood of Christ increase more fervently this month. We've included the Memorare of the Sacred Heart and litany of the Sacred Heart. Begin your July with daily morning prayer. This video is a compilation of many traditional morning prayers Catholics say, and should not be considered a replacement for those who have an obligation to pray the Divine Office morning prayers.

This Forgotten Saint’s Prophecy About Global Digital Currency Is Coming True

From Totus Catholica


On June 23rd, the digital euro cleared its biggest hurdle yet. Could a cashless system fulfil the mark of the beast? The Catholic answer is older than the panic videos. Around the year 260, Victorinus of Poetovio, the first Latin commentator on Scripture, wrote that no one would buy or sell without a mark of allegiance. He had already watched Rome demand certificates of pagan sacrifice, the libelli, and he later died a martyr rather than comply. His warning rests on something far older than Rome. In Ezekiel 9:4, God commands the tav, a Hebrew letter written in the shape of a cross, to be traced on the foreheads of the faithful, and Deuteronomy 6:8 binds God's word to the hand and the forehead. The beast's mark is a point-by-point forgery of those holy signs, and a forgery needs your consent. Heaven stamped you first. Baptism and confirmation seal your total belonging to Christ, and no currency, chip, or ledger can take from your soul what only your will can give away. So live sealed. Renew your baptismal promises, go to confession, and receive the Eucharist. In this video: • The forgotten saint Victorinus and the oldest surviving commentary on Revelation • How Rome's libelli certificates made buying and selling a test of worship • The Hebrew tav in Ezekiel 9;4 and the cross-shaped seal of God • Why the Catechism says you cannot take the mark of the beast by accident • The Nero and 666 objection, and why the Catholic reading welcomes it ⏱ CHAPTERS 0:00 The Digital Euro and Revelation 13 1:09 Can You Take the Mark by Accident 2:38 Victorinus of Poetovio, the Forgotten Saint 3:11 Rome's Libelli, Certificates to Buy and Sell 4:52 The Hebrew Tav, a Cross on the Forehead 5:54 The Mark Is About Worship, Not Technology 8:20 Was It All About Nero and 666 πŸ“– SCRIPTURE REFERENCED • Revelation 13:16,17: no one may buy or sell without the mark of the beast. • Ezekiel 9:4: God commands the tav traced on the foreheads of the faithful before judgment. • Deuteronomy 6:8: bind God's word as a sign on the hand and between the eyes. • Wisdom 14:21: men in bondage to royal authority give created things the name that ought not to be shared. • Exodus 28:36: the high priest's gold plate engraved Holy to the Lord. • Daniel 3: the three young men and the furnace; the whole drama was whether they would bow. • Revelation 7: God seals his own before any trouble begins. ⛪ FROM THE CHURCH FATHERS & THE CATECHISM • Victorinus of Poetovio (3rd century): earliest surviving commentary on Revelation, the servants of the Antichrist receive a mark lest anyone should buy or sell. • St. Irenaeus (2nd century): the number of the beast sums up the whole history of apostasy, and it is safer to await the fulfilment of the prophecy than to guess at names. • St Hippolytus of Rome (3rd century): the Antichrist works by imitation, counterfeiting Christ in everything. • St Jerome (4th century): called Victorinus, the first Latin exegete of the Bible, revised and preserved his commentary in 398. • Origen and St Jerome: the ancient Hebrew tav was written in the shape of a cross. • CCC 1296: the seal marks total belonging to Christ and promises divine protection in the great eschatological trial. • CCC 1272 and 1304: baptism and confirmation imprint an indelible spiritual character, once and forever. • CCC 675: before Christ's return, the Church must pass through a final trial, a deception offering apparent solutions at the price of apostasy. πŸ“œ SOURCES & FURTHER READING • The 1916 critical edition that recovered Victorinus's original, unedited text. • The libelli of the Decian persecution, official certificates of sacrifice (c. 250). • 146 countries and currency unions, covering more than 98% of the world's economy, are now exploring a central bank digital currency. πŸ”— EXPLORE MORE 🌍 Website: https://totuscatholica.org/ Rosary Guide: https://totuscatholica.org/rosary ✉️ Contact: https://totuscatholica.org/contact πŸ” Examination of Conscience: https://catholicexaminationofconscien... πŸ“š Free eBooks: https://buymeacoffee.com/totuscatholi... πŸ‘₯ Become a Totus Insider: https://buymeacoffee.com/totuscatholi...

How the Catholic Church Complicates Our Politics

Years ago, the USCCB issued a policy statement that echoed the Democratic platform. A group of Catholic laymen issued a counter statement that echoed the Republican platform. Neither reflected Catholic Social Teaching!

From Aleteia

By David Mills

Catholic Social Teaching doesn’t map well onto American politics today. That’s a feature, not a bug.

“I’m not,” declares the writer, “a liberal or a conservative. I’m a Catholic.” I see and hear versions of this a lot, especially in my Facebook feed, and I think most of us know the feeling. Neither major party inspires confidence. I keep thinking of the pop song of my childhood, whose chorus went: “Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am stuck in the middle with you.”

That declaration makes sense. It is something the faithful Catholic ought to say as a statement of his fundamental conviction, even if he finds himself a liberal or conservative in practice. It publicly anchors him to a position he can’t abandon when political life tempts him to do so, for example when being a good party member requires him to deny the needs of the poor or the unborn child’s right to life.

Catholic Social Teaching doesn’t map well onto American politics today. Taken as a whole, it speaks more highly of economic freedom than most liberals like and more highly of the need for government to correct the market than most conservatives like. It definitively rules out the social darwinist forms of libertarianism and the collectivist forms of socialism.

The two concerns

Written with the anti-clerical socialists of the day in mind, Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum stresses economic freedom. Written during the Depression, Pope Pius XI‘s Quadragesimo anno stresses the failures of economic freedom and the need for an active state. St. John Paul II’s Centesimus annus offers a kind of synthesis.

Faithful Catholics will weigh the two concerns differently and find the best balance in different places. They will make different prudential judgments about the market and the state. They will have different ideas of how the preferential option for the poor can best be pursued. As a result, they will wind up in different political parties, if they join one at all. (There’s always the Dorothy Day-style anarchy option as well.)

But the ones who join a party — whichever party it is — won’t be entirely comfortable. The faithful Catholic Democrat or Republican will be the one who keeps raising his hand to say, “Wait a minute” and “We’re forgetting that” and “That violates our own principles” and even “The party’s wrong about that.” He will be the one who makes the room groan when he speaks.

His partisan brethren will think him politically unreliable. He probably won’t rise very high in the party. Parties require true believers with flexible consciences. They don’t like people with more fundamental and binding loyalties than the party.

The former governor of Pennsylvania, Robert P. Casey, stands as an example of what happens to a politician in the mainstream of his party who dissents on one point of importance to its leaders. He becomes a non-person — though the party still expects his support.

The Body

Here, as elsewhere, the Church is a gift. It gives us the gift of developed reflection on social and political matters. (The Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church offers the best overview. I’d also much commend a careful reading of the papal statements, from Rerum Novarum to Laudato Si’ .)

If Gilbert and Sullivan were right “That every boy and every gal that’s born into the world alive / Is either a little Liberal or else a little Conservative!” (the lines are from Iolanthe), we will each see some things and not others. It’s the way we’re wired. Through her social teaching, the Church turns our heads and says “Look. There.”

She makes us see what we would not see without her direction. She pushes us to see what we really don’t want to see. When we would be happy accumulating evidence for our position (it’s called confirmation bias), she tells us to look at it the evidence against it.

The Church also gives us the gift of each other. We can do for each other what the Church does for us: turn our heads and make us see something we wouldn’t see. Other people complicate our narrative. They challenge the story through which we want to see the world.

They push us out of the hard polarities into which public debates inevitably develop. The nature of poverty and the poor, for example. On the one side, many people want to believe that the poor suffer the effects of their own bad choices. If they’re poor, it’s their fault. On the other, many people want to believe that poverty’s entirely systemic. The system makes and keeps them poor. The truth is that “the poor” covers a very large and complicated group of people and the causes can’t be reduced to either pole.

You are almost certainly a conservative or a liberal, at least in instinct. In other words, you see some things well and some equally important things not at all. You see political life through a glass darkly, but the Church helps you see far better than you would on your own — as a conservative or a liberal.

SSPX Excommunications & the Vatican's Plan to Cancel Catholicism

From The Remnant TV


The SSPX consecrated four new bishops on July 1, 2026. The next day, the Vatican declared the bishops excommunicated, reviving one of the most painful conflicts in modern Catholic history. Michael Matt lived through the first SSPX consecrations in 1988. There is no argument over the current controversy which he hasn’t heard—and NO, SSPX faithful and priests are NOT included in the “official” decree—then or now. In this special commentary, Michael explains why today's State of Emergency is much worse than that of 1988, why endless arguments over canon law miss the larger picture, and why individual conscience is so integral to this debate. Whether you attend an SSPX chapel, the FSSP, the Institute of Christ the King, a diocesan Latin Mass, or none of the above — this debate is about so much more than where you park your car on Sunday morning. Topics include: • The July 2026 SSPX consecrations • SSPX excommunications • The Vatican’s imprecise use of canonical censure • The state of necessity • Canon law vs. conscience • Why Catholics must not let the Synodal Vatican divide the clans If you've been trying to understand where you should go from here—this is the perspective for you. It is based not on tribalism, but on Michael’s personal experience ever since the day he received the sacrament of Confirmation from Archbishop Lefebvre.

Is the Crisis in the Church Real?

When John Paul II was a Bishop in Poland, he directly disobeyed PopePaul VI's orders not to ordain Priests. Not only was he not disciplined, but he ended up Pope!


From Les Femmes

By Mary Ann Kreitzer

I've been disappointed in Cardinal Sarah's statements criticizing the consecraton of the bishops without a papal mandate. It's not the first time in Church history that a bishop disobeyed the pope. In fact, Pope John Paul II, when he was bishop of Krakow, under the policy of Ostpolitik, was  forbidden to ordain priests. He disobeyed Pope Paul VI's order that no above ground or underground ordinations should take place. He disobeyed and suffered no consequences and, in fact, became pope. 

Why did he disobey? Because he needed priests to serve the faithful in poor, persecuted Poland. It was for the good of Holy Mother Church and the salvation of souls. Is that not the same situation today? In order to have priests you need bishops to ordain them. Will the Society really be able to get permission in the future for priestly ordinations? 

Some claim there is no problem, plenty of bishops could be found who would do it. Is that true? In today's atmosphere, where crushing the Traditional Latin Mass is obviously Rome's intent, would the Vatican allow any bishop to carry out ordinations for the Society? A willing bishops would likely be forbidden. Can any of you armchair critics really believe that scenario isn't true?

Let's get real here. The Society has two purpose as I see it: the salvation of souls and the continued preservation of tradition, i.e., the Traditional Latin Mass and all the sacraments. That can only happen if there are bishops to ordain priests to serve the faithful. 

I'm repeating here a slightly edited post I wrote in 2017. Let's pray for Cardinal Sarah and all those faithful members of the hierarchy whom we desperately need to challenge the scandals and errors coming from Rome. 

Cardinal Robert Sarah: 
Desacralizing and Trivializing the Liturgy Causes a Serious Crisis of Faith

Church Pop recently summarized a talk given by African Cardinal Robert Sarah about the liturgy. This is particularly timely since my book club is discussing this month the Vatican II document on the liturgy. The Church is certainly in crisis and degrading the liturgy, which hit a zenith in the '80s. The uglification of churches, clown Masses, jazz Masses, polka Masses, butterfly vestments, silly songs, liturgical dancers, puppet processions, removing crucifixes and tabernacles from the sanctuary, and other idiotic variations have turned full churches into empty spaces in many places. And sadly things continue particularly where bishops are married to the world.

During the Extraordinary Synod on the Family, Cardinal Kasper insulted Africa with a statement reminiscent of the gospel question, "Can anything good come from Galilee (Africa)?" His statement that the African bishops "should not tell us too much what we have to do." was the arrogant kind of talk so typical of liberal dissenters who know better than God how to create a worldly Utopia. Those bishops have brought about a disaster for Holy Mother Church and, perhaps, it's time to turn to the "dark" continent where the light seems to shine more brightly than in the decadent West.

Here are some of the common sense statements from Cardinal Sarah:
“It is necessary to recognize that the serious, profound crisis that has affected the liturgy and the Church itself since the Council is due to the fact that its center is no longer God and the adoration of Him, but rather men and their alleged ability to ‘do’ something to keep themselves busy during the Eucharistic celebrations.”
“Even today, a significant number of Church leaders underestimate the serious crisis that the Church is going through: relativism in doctrinal, moral and disciplinary teaching, grave abuses, the desacralization and trivialization of the Sacred Liturgy, a merely social and horizontal view of the Church’s mission.”
“The serious crisis of faith, not only at the level of the Christian faithful but also and especially among many priests and bishops, has made us incapable of understanding the Eucharistic liturgy as a sacrifice, as identical to the act performed once and for all by Jesus Christ, making present the Sacrifice of the Cross in a non-bloody manner, throughout the Church, through different ages, places, peoples and nations.”So how should Catholics respond to times of "profound crisis?"

There is only one answer and it is An Easy Way to Become a Saint published by TAN books. (Also available at Amazon.) It's short and easy to read. It talks about the BIG saints who did GREAT BIG THINGS, but also the little saints, those "who lead humble, simple lives performing their daily duties well and using the ordinary but abundant means of sanctity given by God to all Christians." The book is filled with stories about little saints, some canonized like St. Therese of Lisieux, but others known only to God.

The solution to the crisis is always the same. We need to become saints. And how do we become saints? There are two simple ways. First love God. Second, do everything for love of God. Since we were made to love God how hard can that be? Our eyes were made to see. Do we have to think about seeing? Or hearing? Or breathing. God loves us so much that, if we know Him, we can't help but love Him. There's a great little book that can help us. It's called Trustful Surrender to Divine Providence. As our SSPX priests always remind us, everything is in God's Providence. 

So let us be busy about the work of transforming the Church and resolving the crisis of faith by our own holy lives. With the help of God, we can do it. Let us pray,

"Adorable Sacred Heart of Jesus which so greatly loved men and has not spared anything for them, unite with the Immaculate Heart of Your loving Mother, so full of merciful love, and together be my help, my comfort, and my salvation."