Articles

Bishop Schneider denounces vaccines linked to abortion as morally illicit, regardless of remoteness. He urges Catholics to reject complicity in abortion, prioritize eternal salvation over health, and resist anti-life biomedical practices.
Bishop Schneider condemns same-sex civil unions as sinful and contrary to Church teaching. He urges Catholics to pray that Pope Francis retracts his support and returns to defending revealed truth.
A prayer requests for Mary’s intercession for the Pope to consecrate Russia to her Immaculate Heart, leading to Russia’s conversion, world peace, and a renewed Church, as foretold at Fatima.
Bishop Schneider warns that secular society’s rejection of God leads to disorder. He urges renewed missionary zeal and obedience to Christ, affirming that only under His kingship can true peace and unity exist.
The Church has never deposed a pope for heresy. Ideas about removing a heretical pope are theological opinions without universal agreement or doctrinal authority within the Church’s tradition and teaching.
The Church has never deposed a pope for heresy during his reign. Cases like Honorius I were judged posthumously. Only God can ultimately intervene in such rare situations.
No pope has ever been deposed for heresy. Historical cases show posthumous judgment. The Church tolerates such rare failures, trusting divine providence, not advocating deposition to avoid division or schism.
Bishop Schneider examines the possibility of a heretical pope, emphasizing the lack of official consensus or canon law, while affirming that the Church remains faithful despite personal doctrinal errors of a pope.
Bishop Schneider explains the Church lacks authority to depose a heretical pope. Historical cases affirm this. He urges patience and trust in Divine Providence, warning against schism, papolatry, and political solutions.
Bishop Schneider explores how the Church has historically addressed papal heresy, focusing on Pope Honorius I, and emphasizes the difference between individual papal error and the enduring orthodoxy of the Roman See.