
Progressive Turn: Josef Grünwidl Named Archbishop of Vienna
The appointment is yet another sign of a Church increasingly tempted to bend to the spirit of the world.

The appointment is yet another sign of a Church increasingly tempted to bend to the spirit of the world.

The new pope is advised by a Curia that remains Bergoglian in orientation—progressive in theology and socialist in politics.

Trying at all costs to unite the devil and holy water, that is, progressive ideologies and Catholic doctrine, ultimately drains the holy water.

Contemporary Vatican abolitionism does not arise from the Gospel or from Catholic Tradition, but from a blend of progressive theology and European political pressure.

Unlike Bergoglio—who preached dialogue but in practice left room only for those aligned with his views—Prevost seeks to hold together within the Church both fire and water.

The West must relearn that the role of the judiciary is not to redeem the wicked, but to deliver justice to the victims and restore the order disrupted by crime.

The controversy is yet another indicator of the weight of the homosexual lobby and the fragility of internal safeguards.

Europe could once again become attractive by presenting itself as a civilization capable of uniting prosperity and dignity.

In the name of an Orwellian notion of freedom, we risk creating a fragile and dependent market where global platforms remain the uncontested masters.

A real solution can only come through the marginalization and neutralization of religious extremist forces, both Islamic and Jewish.