Bishop Athanasius Schneider Visits Thomas More College

By: Bishop Athanasius Schneider

On Thursday, October 7, the Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary, Bishop Athanasius Schneider, ORC (Astana, Kazakhstan) visited the campus of Thomas More College to celebrate a Pontifical Low Mass. The bishop was invited to New Hampshire as a guest of Sophia Institute Press.

“I was delighted that our friends at Thomas More College could partner with us,” said Sophia Institute President Charlie McKinney. “Thomas More College was able to arrange a beautiful outdoor Mass and made Bishop Schneider and guests from Sophia Institute feel very welcome. That’s no surprise because hospitality and festivity are hallmarks of Thomas More College. It made for a solemn and joyful anchor to this important moment and this great feast day.”

In his homily, Bishop Schneider reflected on the Christian victory at the 1571 Battle of Lepanto and the powerful simplicity of the Holy Rosary. Contemplating the challenges that the Church and the faithful face in the world today, he proclaimed that the Rosary “is our true weapon, which Heaven gave us for our time.” Bishop Schneider likened the five mysteries prayed in each Rosary to the five stones David used to take down Goliath, saying that “God has chosen and is choosing always the simple ones…this is the method of God.” Addressing the students directly, he told them that they are the ones who are “preparing the soil for the renewal of the Church.” In closing, he exhorted all present to live with confidence, trust, and joy.

“Bishop Schneider’s message helped to strengthen the sense of Christian confidence—hope—that through prayer the Church will persevere through her current difficulties. If we are facing a ‘Lepanto moment,’ we need that lively hope.”

–Dr. Philip Lawler, Senior Fellow at the Center for the Restoration of Christian Culture

President Fahey remarked, “We are honored that Bishop Schneider chose to offer a Pontifical Mass on the Feast of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary. The students had a rare opportunity to hear one of the most forthright voices of our age.” Dr. Fahey was also pleased that the bishop drew attention to this day being the 450th anniversary of the Battle of Lepanto. “His sermon on the feast day, with its impassioned reminder of the significance of Lepanto, and the decisive role that prayer by small groups of Catholics played was extremely moving. His highlighting of our own College’s place in current struggles and spiritual battles was inspiring.” Dr. Philip Lawler, a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Restoration of Christian Culture, added that “Bishop Schneider’s message helped to strengthen the sense of Christian confidence—hope—that through prayer the Church will persevere through her current difficulties. If we are facing a ‘Lepanto moment,’ we need that lively hope.”

After the Mass, Bishop Schneider mingled with members of the community and ate lunch in the student cafeteria, where he enjoyed a recitation of G.K. Chesterton’s epic poem Lepanto by Thomas More students. A truly momentous occasion, this feast day will be remembered on campus for years to come.

The Deposition of
Bishop Joseph E. Strickland

“The one charge which is now sure to secure severe punishment is the careful keeping of the traditions of the Fathers.” These words of St. Basil (Ep. 243) can most aptly illustrate the deposition of the Bishop of Tyler, TX/USA, His Excellency Joseph E. Strickland. The deposition of Bishop Joseph E. Strickland signifies a black day for the Catholic Church of our day. We are witnessing a blatant injustice towards a bishop who did his duty in preaching and defending with parrhesia the immutable Catholic faith and morals and in promoting the sacredness of the liturgy, especially in the immemorial traditional rite of the Mass. All understand, and even the declared enemies of this Confessor Bishop, that the accusations brought against him are ultimately insubstantial and disproportionate and were used as a welcome opportunity to silence an uncomfortable prophetic voice within the Church.

What happened to the Bishops during the Arian crisis in the 4th century, who were deposed and exiled only because they intrepidly preached the traditional Catholic Faith, is again happening in our day. At the same time several Bishops, who publicly support heresy, liturgical abuses, gender ideology and openly invite their priests to bless same-sex couples, are not in the least importuned or sanctioned by the Holy See.

Bishop Strickland will probably go down in history as an “Athanasius of the Church in the USA”, who however, unlike St. Athanasius, is not persecuted by the secular power, but incredibly by the Pope himself. It seems that a kind of “purge” of Bishops, who are faithful to the immutable Catholic Faith and the Apostolic discipline, and which has been going on already for some time, has reached now a decisive phase.

May the sacrifice, which Our Lord asked from Bishop Strickland bear plenty spiritual fruits for time and eternity. Bishop Strickland and other faithful Bishops, who were already asked to resign, who are currently marginalized or who will be the next in der row, should say in all sincerity to Pope Francis: “Holy Father, why are you persecuting and beating us? We tried to do what all holy Popes asked us to do? With fraternal love we offer the sacrifice of this kind of persecution and exile for the salvation of your soul and for the good state of the Holy Roman Church. Indeed, we are your best friends, Most Holy Father!”

+ Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of Saint Mary in Astana