Saturday, 30 November 2013

Reflection on Freethinking

If you are a liberal secularist in this culture, you are not a free thinker but a conformist.

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

The Definition of Modernism

The essential notes of modernism are: naturalism, rationalism and subjectivism.

Reflection on Modernism

Modernism is the inversion of man's relation to God and ultimately the abolition of it.

Monday, 25 November 2013

Reflection on the Cross and the Christ

Christianity devoid of the Cross devolves into a sentimental socialism.

Reflection on The Guardian

I never feel more dirty than when I catch myself reading an article from the Guardian online. Yet, one must be aware of Satan's tactics presented there.

Sunday, 17 November 2013

Reflection on Papal Doubt

Absence of dogmatism is fatal for a Roman Pontiff. He is not to be a seeker of the truth but the faithful guardian and transmitter of it.

Saturday, 16 November 2013

Reflection on Humanism

Oh to the days when humanists were devoted to literary and scholarly excellence instead of being petty, self-obsessed bores!

Friday, 15 November 2013

Reflection on Free Speech

Has there ever been another age in which freedom of expression has been so championed but such horror at its actual exercise?

Thursday, 14 November 2013

Reflection on Preaching

Preaching not based on a solid understanding of theology is liable to lead the people astray. Pious sounding words can only flatter the preacher. It was for this reason that St. Dominic wanted his brothers to study and know the truth first before they could communicate it to those in need.

Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Reflection on the Crisis in the Church

The entire crisis in the Church concerns an understanding of the very identity of the Church.

Reflection on the Private Sphere

To relegate religion to the private sphere is to relegate it to irrelevance.

Tuesday, 12 November 2013


Reflection on Human Rights

Fortuitous aggregations of matter can not possess inalienable rights.

Reflection on Guilt

The man who has never felt guilt will never possess a clear conscience.

Monday, 11 November 2013

Reflection on Catholic Culture

Catholic culture may be likened to a silent sermon, communicating eternal truths in a temporal setting.

Reflection on Exploitation

It is to be wondered who confiscates more of our wealth, the so-called greedy corporations or an activist and compassionate government?

Reflection on Islam

How far astray have those Catholics gone who express admiration for Islam! To leap praise upon a religion that denies the divinity of Christ and His passion and Resurrection is to abandon the Faith entirely.

Reflection on Faith and Morals

It is not incidental that men leave the Church for matters of morals. The call may go out to alter a particular sexual moral teaching but who would clamour for an acceptance of Monothelitism? This shows that the primary objections to the Faith are not intellectual or rational but rather the refusal of man to submit himself to a truth that directly affects him.

Reflection on the Identity of Jesus Christ

Each age may be defined as how it interprets the person and purpose of Christ.

The Importance of a Catholic Culture and on the Spirit of Spain




Doctor Fray Francisco Barbado Viejo O.P entering Salamanca, Spain as he takes possession of his new diocese. Taken in 1942 in the Plaza Mayor. 

Pax Christi in Regno Christi.

The preservation of an authentic Catholic culture is vital for the faithful handing on of the doctrine of the Church. The culture is the environment in which a soul is taught, nourished and grows. It is the sensible vehicle of the transmission of the Faith until our days, handed on once to the saints. It will not do for us to simply consider the Faith as a personal matter, reserved to the inner consciences of a group of believers. It may seem pious to claim that the believer should only shut himself up in his room and pray alone but we must be wary of such deceptive thinking. Our Lord taught us to do that it is true, but the motives of these people are to deny the public acknowledgement of God and His holiness. So the culture, so the soul. I have seen Catholic souls who were zealous for the Faith become polluted by our pagan culture and its allurements. I have waned so often in any devotion as our culture is enticing and it presents an easy façade to each unfortunate soul who pays too much attention to it. It is not surprising that a soul who is bombarded with these false values will end up ignoring the eternal. One is unable to evade one´s environment and how it teaches us. Often I do feel rather alone in adhering to the Faith. I do not see fidelity or purity on the television, on the radio or music channels, in the street, or in the lecture hall. Hardly even in the home. Etsi Deus non daretur. We live with the basic assumption that God does not exist. If for sentimental reasons we recall Him, it goes no further than that. You may consider the flourishing of the martyrs in the nascent Church when men and women, young and old (I am particularly struck the virgin martyrs who also seem an insult to our age) preferred nothing to Christ and His glory. The Faith was transmitted throughout the 300 years of persecution, hostility and paganistic allurements. These souls had to be brave and be confident in the hope that was promised to them through the preaching of the apostles. The faithful are much more numerous nowadays but the fire of divine charity is merely a flicker. Christianity in this post-Christian world is like failed experiment to our common man. Adherence to its doctrines is considered an outrageous assault on Enlightenment principles and the greater 'achievements' that man takes pride in.

 I was only born in 1990 and although the culture was well on its way to death, so many of today's assumptions and demands must have seemed bizarre. How blessed must the faithful of Doctor Fray Francisco Barbado Viejo have felt to see their learned and pious prelate process throughout the streets of that venerable city where God was once worshipped. This was during the days of the beginning of Franco's dictatorship in Spain. Salamanca was then a fiercely nationalistic city, now the bookshops are filled with tomes recounting how terrible El Generalísimo was. Without a doubt, El Caudillo was a deeply unpleasant fellow but I firmly believe his cause for the preservation of a Catholic Spain was entirely just. To be frank, I would have needed to support him as I am sure the Republicans would have happily shot me. Those years, a triumph of the Faith but one in which daily life was particularly difficult, in fact to this day, they are known as los años de hambre (the years of hunger). Spain now has lost the spirit of Catholicism and in turn has lost herself. It is easy to be fooled by the visible manifestations of the Church in Spain. Her churches are glorious, processions during Holy Week are well attended where a great deal of time and money is spent by the brotherhoods that organise them, and the populace are generally baptised into the Catholic Faith. Morally speaking, the nation is bankrupt. Licentiousness, abortion, fornication and drunkenness among the youth abound. The Spaniards are a deeply passionate people, strongly regional, distrustful of certain groups, and often this spirit can be unleashed rather violently, as was seen in the run up to the Civil War and during it.
 Spain was created by Catholicism. It was the Faith that united the disparate groups of the Christian incipient kingdoms that emerged after the Muslim invasion by Tariq in 711. The scandal of the Reconquest of the Iberian peninsula, to recover the ´´unity´´´achieved by the Visigoths, was that it took so long. 700 or so years! With much infighting between the Christian monarchs and often stern warnings from the Roman Pontiffs to sort themselves out for the sake of Christendom. To us today, the fight to restore the Faith seems too radical, obscurantist, intolerant and not worth the effort. Surely, our knowledge of the truth has fled from us. The love of that truth has died in our breast.

The assumptions and the world view that we posses are completely shaky and devoid of the knowledge of God. Man forms moral judgements about what must be done on the basis of what he believes to be important. With an entirely secular understanding of morality and man´s place in the universe, it is nigh impossible to present a defence of traditional values. It appears absurd to the average person, even to the so-called 'good'. I understand how men have the moral law in them and therefore are without excuse on the day of judgement, yet that foundation has been splintered through sinful living and a new edifice of ´progress´and ´reason´ has been erected. Our axioms, world view and end are infused with error and fallacy.

Will we return to an authentic Catholic culture? I honestly do not believe so, unless the world reaches its ultimate depravity and ends up destroying itself. It may then look back fondly on the sweet certainty of the Catholic Faith.

Until He come again, ¡Viva Cristo Rey!
In Domino,

Charles

Saturday, 9 November 2013

From La Torre - Francisco de Quevedo





Withdrawn to this solitary place,
With a few but learned books,
I live conversing with the dead,

listening to them with my eyes.

Open always, if not always understood,

they amend, they enrich my affairs:
in rhythms of contrapuntal silence,
awakened, they speak to the dream of life.
 

O Don José, for those great souls
absconded by death, the learnéd
press avenges time´s slanders.

In irrevocable flight the hour flees:
but it can be counted fortunate

when we better oursevles by reading.
 - Francisco de Quevedo

Reflection on Feminism and the Speculation about the first Female Cardinal

It is to be wondered whether feminists wish to abolish power structures....or simply to join them.

Thursday, 7 November 2013

Traditional Latin Mass in Salamanca


While studying in Salamanca, Spain, I had the good fortune to assist at the Holy Sacrifice according to the authentic Roman rite. During the first semester it was offered once a month by a priest of the SSPX, a newly ordained young French man. For the second semester we had a greater blessing as the SSPX came up twice a month to offer Mass for us. I wish to share some pictures here of the church where once again the Mass of saints such as Juan de Avila, Teresa, Juan de la Cruz was offered to the Father Almighty.


As you can see the church was built in the gothic style with the customary ribbed vaults. However, the current structure from the 16th century replaced the building constructed in the 12th in the Romanesque style.





Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Reflection on Beauty

Let beauty be loved and God shall be known.

Reflection on Dejection

It is particularly difficult nowadays for one not to have the desire to spit towards the west and flee to the desert.

Reflection on the Wickedness of the World

Often I wonder if the whole world is rotten because of silence...or consent

Monday, 4 November 2013

Reflection on Hostility to the Roman Mass

What madman could ever have dreamed that the defenders of the Roman Mass would be labelled as being in rebellion against the Roman Pontiff? Meanwhile, the demons chuckle.

Saturday, 2 November 2013

Prayer for All Souls' Day



Regard O most merciful Father, the face of Thy Son our Lord, Jesus Christ and release the souls of the faithful departed from their purgation. In virtue of the Holy Sacrifice which ascends before Thee, cleanse their souls from all defilements and all obstacles to the sight of Thy sacred face. Hear the cries of the Church for the end to their suffering so that they may enter Thy presence without stain. Father, grant us all final perseverance in holy charity so we may all share the inheritance of the saints in light. 

Reflection on All Saints' Day

Do not consider sanctification the privileged luxury of a few. We become either saints or devils, there  exists no other possibility