Montfort

 

Papers
  • 1 - Jean Guitton and the Modernism in the II Vatican Council:
    Report from Istituto Paolo VI di Brescia (Italy)

    From the series of articles that we have published about the personality and thinking of Jean Guitton – considered to be the greatest philosopher of the 20th century, close friend of Paul VI and who took part at the sections of the Vatican II – we have submitted his most serious and revealing confession, about the influence of the Modernism in the II Vatican Council (www.montfort.org.br/veritas/jeanguitton4.html), to the advice of many theologians, among those the Istituto Paolo VI di Brescia, the greatest source of documentation and studies about Pope Paul VI, one of the Popes of the Vatican II.
    We introduce, in this edition, the "Report" from that "Institute", along with our reply-comments, published in the sequence.
     
  • 2 - Jean Guitton and the Modernism in the II Vatican Council:
    reply to the report from Istituto Paolo VI di Brescia (Italy)

    About the grave confession from Guitton, Istituto Paolo VI di Brescia has restrained itself in its "Report", applying it solely to the ambit of “Revelation”, understood according to the Dei Verbum document, when Guitton has referred to the influence of the Modernism in the Vatican II in wide sense. Despite of that, the very "Report" from Istituto Paolo VI di Brescia ends up also confirming Guitton's most serious confession, since Dei Verbum follows the “New Theology” doctrine, whose foundations are found in the Gnostic conception of “Revelation”, proclaimed by the Modernist heresy, and condemned by St. Pious X in 1907, and presented in our commentary.
    It is from this new Gnostic concept of “Revelation”, introduced in the Church by means of the II Vatican Council, as confessed by Guitton, that, by affecting the Dogma, has propitiated the rising of so many other modernist news, such as the new concept of Church, along with its painfully famous "subsistit", the collegiality, religious freedom, ecumenism, etc. Obviously, however, in our reply-comments to the learned “Report” from Istituto Paolo VI di Brescia, we will deal with the influence of Modernism in the II Vatican Council also restraining it to the matter of “Revelation”, following the "Report".

     
  • Read the Bible? - Orlando Fedeli
    Protestants are known by their insistence in the Bible, which they read and insistently recommend to others, as if by reading it one would find salvation. From that comes the protestant slogan: "Read the Bible". But, where do protestants take this law or advice from, that everyone should read the Holy Scriptures? Obviously God wrote the Scriptures for being read. But read by whom? By everyone? By some? Who would have the mission to read the Scriptures and teach it to the wise and to the humble minds? The Bible itself refutes the protestant doctrine about it.


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