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Catholics/Differences between Traditional Catholicism and the New Order Sect

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Question
What are the basic differences between Traditional Catholicism and Modern Catholicism?

Answer
Traditional Catholicism is what Catholicism has always been, based upon Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition, as explicated by the Councils, Doctors of the Church, and popes.  In the 1960s, under the impetus of the Modernist Vatican II Council (1962-1965) and the influence of Protestants and Freemasons, the Church was converted into a vehicle to promote a Modernist New Order sect, with unCatholic doctrine, unCatholic morals, unCatholic worship, and an unCatholic presbyterate in place of a priesthood.

In order to fool the once Catholics, this New Order sect was introduced gradually, maintaining just enough trappings of the traditional Church to make people believe that the New Order sect remained Catholic.  Yet anyone with eyes open can see that it is not.  It has Protestantized worship and sacraments, doctrine that Martin Luther would be proud of, and morality at which pigs would be embarassed.

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Fr. Michael

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A traditional Catholic priest, who provides forthright answers to questions FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF TRADITIONAL CATHOLICISM (not the New Order) on topics pertaining to TRADITIONAL Roman Catholicism, including theology, the Bible, Church history, the Latin language, liturgy (especially the Traditional Latin Mass), and music (especially Gregorian chant), and current events in the Catholic Church.

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