Bishop Schneider, shaped by Soviet-era Eucharistic reverence, opposes Communion in the hand. His 2008 book Dominus Est and crusade call for restoration of kneeling reception as vital Eucharistic reparation.
The Council’s liturgical directives were vague. A balanced 1965 reform followed its intent, but Bugnini’s 1967 Novus Ordo draft was a major shift and was rejected by most Synod fathers.
Bishop Schneider professes that only Jesus Christ is the true path to God, rejecting religious relativism. He urges fidelity to Catholic doctrine and prays for Church leaders to uphold revealed truth.
Bishop Schneider calls Catholics to uphold the immutable faith, reject heresy, and remain steadfast amid crisis. He stresses doctrinal clarity, Marian devotion, and fidelity to tradition as essential for renewal.
Bishop Schneider rejects Archbishop Viganò’s denial of Pope Francis’s legitimacy, calling it a grave error. He deems the excommunication excessive and urges prayer, correction with love, and fidelity to tradition.
Bishop Schneider states the Pope remains in office despite errors outside ex cathedra. Catholics must preserve faith, correct respectfully, and remember the Church is Christ’s, not under the Pope’s absolute control.
Bishop Schneider states bishops are not the Pope’s subordinates but brothers with divine authority. They must correct errors, uphold faith, and speak out when Church teaching or divine truth is at risk.
Bishop Schneider warns of widespread doctrinal confusion and moral relativism, critiques problematic synodal methods and Vatican appointments, and urges Catholics to resist heresy through truth, charity, and deeper knowledge of the faith.
Bishop Schneider condemns sedevacantism and explains Archbishop Viganò's excommunication for schism. He urges faithful trust in God's guidance, not rash judgments, while calling for prayer and respectful correction within the Church.
Bishop Schneider clarifies heresy as obstinate denial of truth, denounces Protestant and modernist errors, upholds Church teaching on sin and sacraments, and urges a new syllabus of errors to combat confusion.
In Flee From Heresy, Bishop Schneider urges clarity amid Church confusion, stressing a bishop’s duty to defend truth and affirming the faithful’s right to respectfully correct errors, even from the po
Bishop Schneider condemns doctrinal relativism and modern ideologies as a rebellion against God. He urges fidelity to unchanging truth and sees the bishop’s role as preserving and transmitting the authentic Catholic faith.
Bishop Schneider warns of a modern crisis in the Church, rooted in relativism and a synthesis of past heresies. He stresses the need for clarity, truth, and fidelity to Catholic teaching.
Bishop Schneider notes the St. Gallen group’s alleged political influence but calls for a “holy mafia” of prayer, sacrifice, and reparation, trusting God’s intervention and encouraging faithful cardinals to act discreetly.
Joyful penance flows from love for Christ and the mission to save souls. United under Our Lady, Catholics courageously live and defend their faith as a spiritual family and victorious army.
Bishop Schneider warns of confusion and heresy in today’s Church, especially reemerging Gnosticism denying reality and revelation, urging Catholics to recognize errors and uphold faith to protect spiritual health and charity.
The 1965 Missal balanced vernacular use and tradition. Bugnini’s Novus Ordo, rejected by the 1967 Synod, was nonetheless imposed by Pope Paul VI in 1969 despite Council opposition.
Bishop Schneider identifies modernism, the denial of objective, revealed truth, as today’s chief heresy. He urges clergy to expose errors courageously, teach the faith clearly, and defend souls from spiritual harm.
Man of God by Bishop Schneider offers spiritual guidance for priests, rooted in tradition. It calls priests to holiness and urges the faithful to support them through prayer, reverence, and fidelity.
Bishop Schneider describes his journey from persecuted faith to bishopric, laments post-Vatican II irreverence, and emphasizes restoring tradition. He believes true Church renewal comes from faithful “little ones” preserving reverent worship.
Bishop Schneider views mass migration as intentional Islamization, threatening Christianity in Europe. He believes demographic shifts could lead to Muslim majorities and sees possible divine purpose in a coming Church purification.
Receiving Communion in the hand risks losing sacred fragments of the host. Without a paten, these fall and are crushed, making the practice, though permitted, gravely concerning due to its consequences.