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Fauci Backlash? He Sounds Like 50 Years of AmChurch Catholicism

A couple weeks ago Katty Kay of the BBC interviewed Dr. Anthony Fauci, who is tied to Georgetown University, and, like myself, went to Jesuit schools. I have enough anecdotal materials on Jesuit schools, that, like Fr. Hardon used to say, “I could write books.”

The money quote driving so much criticism is this:

“My own personal ethics on life are enough to keep me going on the right path, and I think there are enough negative aspects about the organisational Church that you are very well aware of,” says Fauci. “I’m not against it. I identify as a Catholic, I was raised, baptised and married in a Catholic Church, but as far as practicing, it seems almost like a proforma thing that I don’t really need to do.”

How Dr Anthony Fauci delivers ‘inconvenient truths’ to world leaders, 30 Nov 2023 BBC News.

Dear reader, if you don’t recognize the modernist here, then I haven’t done a good job in the podcasts. The entire thing is self-referential. Besides, he sounds like someone who went with the Richard McBrien’s Catholicism explanation of reality.

I did enjoy some reactions to this Fauci quote — George Upper writes in Western Journal, “my grandfather used to say that he didn’t need to go to church, because he could worship God in nature…” Upper is smart to recognize this excuse. And it is the same used by modernists, like Fauci above, who use the immanentist (God is everywhere) simplified form of monism… In a Forum Focus, Frank Morriss was quick to point out that Maritain reacted to such malarkey as “a good abridgment of anglo-modern stupidity.”

For a modernist like Fauci, God is an abstract concept of some kind. I don’t know if Fauci has even formulated the thoughts well enough to evolve along Tielhald de Chardin’s cosmic spiral evolution to hell and error (and have no doubts, unlike Pope Francis suggested recently, there’s no salvaging de Chardin, he was a trash heap of errors wrapped in acts of fraud), but, like a good immanentist, Fauci’s words above indicate that he thinks God is a principle from within himself. (this is the ordinary end point of monism, and it is the intended purpose of modernism). Behind all that self-referential psycho-mush he uttered, he is caught in this anglo-modern stupidity, and he got there being in Jesuit schools.

It should be even more punctuated when, during Advent, we prepare for the Incarnation — God became a Man. Jesus was an infant, even. Why is this important? Because while God is everywhere, indeed, Fr. Hardon used to say that the most succinct definition of nothing is “where God is not”, there was special place where God decided *to be*. He became a man with human ears, with human hands, with a face.

With those human hands, human mouth, and body, Jesus worked miracles. And it was, as Fr. Hardon would say, get this, underline it in red, encircle it in blue, and highlight it in yellow, ONLY with His human body. Martha and Mary asked Jesus to come when their brother Lazarus died. Jesus came (and wept). And with His human mouth cried out, “Lazarus, come out.” Lazarus, already stinking from decay in the grave, came out. God is everywhere, but He wants us to be with His Human Presence.

Dear Reader, you know where I am going: The real presence in the Blessed Sacrament. Jesus is only in some places. And He wants to work miracles today, for those who believe that what looks like bread and wine is *in reality* really, truly, and substantially His human self there with us. The same Human self, in fact, Who called Lazarus out of the tomb, or pushed mud into the eyes of a blind man to cure his blindness…

Fauci speaks like so many AmChurch (American Catholics) modernists, that we know what he’d say of the Blessed Sacrament… that is is a symbol of community, or that it is a culmination of togetherness, and so on. An abstract idea. Why? The devil seduces people to see Jesus and the Blessed Sacrament as an abstract symbol because we can ignore and “grow beyond” abstractions… we cannot, however, ignore a Man. Especially a God-Man.

I realize that people found this quote revealing about Fauci, but acting as if he is something special or unique among American Catholics is just, well, as Maritain put it: “anglo-modern stupidity.” He sounds like many of our erstwhile Catholic cohorts have for decades now…


Afterthoughts… I perhaps should have used the headline “Fauci is nothing special – just one of millions of Catholics weaponized by the modernist AmChurch Bishops…” It’s true, Fauci is nothing special, he is, rather in fact, a cheap and rather dull weaponized clone of all the Catholics that had their brains scrambled by the modernist Judases that have plagued us for nearly a century in the AmChurch. It’s what I railed on long ago on a BFP podcast wherein I said that they tell us that the Latin Americans coming to the US are “the future of the Church”, but if they [the US bishops] do to them what they did to us, they’ll all be gone also, they will all turn out to be Fuacis themselves… Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us!


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