Bishop Schneider condemns vaccines from fetal cell lines as immoral, highlighting that Catholics must reject any form of cooperation with abortion. He stresses the need for unwavering opposition to abortion in all circumstances.
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 rejects legal recognition of homosexual cohabitation, calling it immoral and scandalous. He warns that such support strengthens ideological propaganda and contradicts the Church’s teaching and God’s revealed law.
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.
Bishop Schneider prays in reparation for Eucharistic offenses, affirming belief in Christ’s Real Presence and urging reverence, penance, and fidelity amid sacrilege, indifference, and doctrinal error in the Church.
Bishop Schneider condemns modern Eucharistic abuses and emphasizes Christ’s sorrow. Drawing on saints, Fatima, and theology, he urges the faithful to console Jesus and make reparation for these grave offenses.
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.
The critique highlights Vatican II’s doctrinal ambiguities and unintended consequences, arguing that non-infallible elements can and should be clarified or corrected, as historical examples of earlier councils have shown.
Bishop Schneider claims Dignitatis Humanae paved the way for theological relativism by affirming religious freedom as a natural right, leading to the Abu Dhabi Document’s error that God wills religious diversity.
Bishop Schneider rejects the Abu Dhabi Document’s claim that God wills religious diversity, affirming that true faith exists only through Christ. He warns against theological confusion and false interreligious unity.
Bishop Schneider condemns the suspension of public Masses during COVID-19, urging faithful witness like saints before us. He emphasizes the centrality of the Eucharist and true pastoral courage.
Bishop Schneider emphasizes Mary’s divine motherhood, her role in spiritual rebirth, and her powerful intercession. He urges Catholics to entrust themselves to her, especially in today’s crisis of faith.
Bishop Schneider defends the Appeal’s concerns on COVID-19 restrictions, warning against censorship, state overreach into Church affairs, and loss of civil liberties, calling instead for honest debate and civic courage.
Bishop Schneider calls the COVID-19 worship bans a divine trial to purify the Church. Catholics should respond with faith, forming domestic churches and growing spiritually through prayer, patience, and perseverance.
Bishop Schneider rejects claims of an invalid papacy due to heresy, emphasizing the lack of Magisterial backing. He urges respectful resistance to error and reliance on prayer, not personal judgment.
Bishop Schneider warns against forced Communion in the hand, citing hygiene risks and loss of reverence, and calls bans on Communion on the tongue during pandemics an abuse of authority.
Bishop Schneider calls Querida Amazonia a hopeful sign, as it defends celibacy and male-only ordination. He sees it as a rebuke to secularized pressures distorting Catholic doctrine and evangelization.
Bishop Schneider criticized Germany’s “synodal path” as heretical and urged Pope Francis to act. He affirmed that despite the crisis, the Catholic Church’s divine truth and unity will ultimately prevail.
A prayer of reparation to the Holy Trinity for idol worship during the Amazon Synod, asking for mercy, enlightenment of Church leaders, conversion of souls, and strength for faithful Catholics.
Bishop Schneider condemns Pachamama worship at the Amazon Synod as idolatry, rejects syncretism, praises the removal of statues, and calls for prayers and Pope Francis’ condemnation of these acts.
Bishop Schneider appeals for clarity and truth amid Church confusion, warning against silence, relativism, and error, even when found in papal documents or synodal agendas.
Bishop Schneider affirms the family's divine origin and parents’ duty to form children in the faith. He highlights the family as the domestic church and seedbed of vocations amid today’s secular crisis.
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 Notre Dame fire is seen as a divine warning, reflecting spiritual collapse within the Church. It calls for repentance, renewal of faith, and courageous evangelization by Catholic clergy and faithful.
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.