LeoChurch is pure theater. He is always well rehearsed, reads only from a carefully prepared script, wears the suave masklike face of a Dolce & Gabbana male model. Even his crowds cheer and adore on cue, as if sent by central casting. As Chris Jackson writes, “We are witnessing the triumph of a new religion…And in the end, that creed has no Cross, no sin, no Savior, just smiling youth, green initiatives, viral campaigns, and a Church that has learned to speak, at last, the language of the world…. From the Scouts to the social media influencers [to the “Pilgrim Youth” partygoers], Leo’s Church invites everyone to feel loved, included, and relevant…” The greatest of the Jubi-Leo beatitudes is Blessed are the Comfortable.
Brother Bugnolo from Rome boldly summed everything up this way: “And for all this, we need to thank the Holy Spirit, for allowing Prevost to fall into such a spectacular heresy, to make it clear to the whole world, that it is theologically and morally impossible that this man has the grace of the Petrine Office.”
LeoChurch is pure theater. He is always well rehearsed, reads only from a carefully prepared script, wears the suave masklike face of a Dolce & Gabbana male model. Even his crowds cheer and adore on cue, as if sent by central casting. As Chris Jackson writes, “We are witnessing the triumph of a new religion…And in the end, that creed has no Cross, no sin, no Savior, just smiling youth, green initiatives, viral campaigns, and a Church that has learned to speak, at last, the language of the world…. From the Scouts to the social media influencers [to the “Pilgrim Youth” partygoers], Leo’s Church invites everyone to feel loved, included, and relevant…” The greatest of the Jubi-Leo beatitudes is Blessed are the Comfortable.
Brother Bugnolo from Rome boldly summed everything up this way: “And for all this, we need to thank the Holy Spirit, for allowing Prevost to fall into such a spectacular heresy, to make it clear to the whole world, that it is theologically and morally impossible that this man has the grace of the Petrine Office.”