Issue: January 1991

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From the Editor's Desk

What's significant in indicating the breakdown of authority and hierarchy within the Conciliar Church is what any Catholic can read in any diocesan magazine at any time. For the spirit of religious indifference has produced such a monstrous corruption that Catholics no longer feel any shame at equating their holy and immaculate Mother, the Catholic Church, with the numerous prostitutes, the Protestant sects.

The Archbishop Speaks

The sermon of Archbishop Lefebvre on the 20th anniversary of the official erection of the Society of St. Pius X, November 1, 1970. Plus a question and answer about the controversy over Archbishop's signature on the Conciliar documents Dignitatis Humanae and Gaudium et Spes.

His Excellency Returns to Gabon!

An article from the French magazine Fideliter about the Archbishop's recent visit to Gabon.

Rebirth of the Children's Eucharistic Crusade

In homage to the holy patron of our Society, we would like here to tell briefly the story of that marvelous crusade: the Children's Eucharistic Crusade.

The Fruit of Abortion, Part 2

A knowledgeable layman continues to examine the judgeship of David Souter—uncovering the pro-abort under the rhetoric...

An Open Letter of Encouragement

A grandmother's view.

Ambrose Observes

What I wish to address in this column and next month's is the notion that the "abortion debate continues." I believe that the abortion war continues, but that the debate must be couched in different terms...

Questions and Answers

An interesting assortment of questions, from the Byzantine Rite to The Poem of the Man God, answered by Father Laisney.

Hidden Treasure

As is so often the case, the obvious is often overlooked. One of the greatest treasures to be found in the United States is the only oil portrait of St. Pius X painted from actual life. This picture hangs in the Mabee-Gerrer Museum of Art at St. Gregory's College, Shawnee, Oklahoma.

Good News for Pilgrims to Lourdes...

The Society's priory at Lourdes and a hotel across the street welcome the pilgrim to Lourdes.

Martyrs of the French Revolution: The Massacres of 1790 and 1791

We have asked Dr. Hilgar now to go back to the beginning and give a more complete account of the gruesome and senseless killings of priests and laity which happened earlier.

Saint Sernin of Toulouse

The Basilica of St. Sernin which stands today is the most famous, the largest and most beautiful of the romanesque churches in southern France, the richest in relics...

...stultorum infinitus est numerus

Reading between the lines of the mainstream Catholic news...