Articles

Our Lady of the Rosary, Pray for Us!

Editor’s Note: The following treatise on the history and power of the Holy Rosary appeared in the pages of The Remnant back in 1996. It was written by late, great Solange Hertz, who was a regular Remnant columnist for many years and who is greatly missed even to this day. In your charity, please remember the repose of the soul of this champion pioneer traditional Catholic, who with her powerful pen, proclaimed the Kingship of Christ and defended the Queenship of Mary all throughout her long career. Her work on the Rosary especially is more apropos in our apocalyptic time than it was thirty years ago. Yes, it’s a comprehensive treatment (which means it is not short), but it is powerful, it is complete, and it will remove the blindfold of anyone who reads it all the way to the end. MJM

Read More »

Two Prayer Requests from the SSPX

In the past week, the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) has released two important prayer requests: one related to Bishop Tissier de Mallerais, and the other related to the 2024 elections.

Read More »

Proxy Wars Are Never Justified

The war in Ukraine is, in fact, a proxy war between the US and Russia. We came close on September 14 to authorizing Ukraine to use long-range missiles, which could have potentially escalated the conflict to the nuclear level. The fact that it was US authorization that Ukraine sought tells us all we need to know about who is calling the shots.

Read More »

A Binging Pivot

Interest rates are The Fed’s dependent drug. There was no need for it, but the Fed’s rate cut in a supposedly stable and growing economy only kicks the inflation can farther down the road until after November’s election.

Read More »

Bishop Schneider to Pope: “Divine Revelation forbids this.”

This clip is the first public presentation of that profession of Faith. The text, published simultaneously on The Remnant website here, has subsequently gone viral and thus far has been published in: English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Polish, Russian, Hungarian, Korean, and Estonian.

Read More »

A Profession of Faith in a Time of Apostasy

After the institution of the new and everlasting Covenant in Jesus Christ, no one may be saved by adherence to the teachings and practices of non-Christian religions. Because “the prayer, which is directed to God, must be linked with Christ, the Lord of all people, the one Mediator (1 Tm 2:5; Heb 8:6; 9:15; 12:24) through whom alone we have access to God (Rom 5:2; Eph 2:18; 3:12).” ( General Instruction of the Liturgy of the Hours, n. 6)

Read More »

The Novel Children of Alabama

Unique? They are. They are silent, unobtrusive; one scarcely realizes the life that’s in them. But it’s there. To a court in Alabama, not only are they alive, they are “extrauterine children.”

Read More »

Sacred Gestures and Symbols: Why Communion in the Hand is Unacceptable

Knowing perfectly this major deficiency that resulted after the commission of the first sin, God has always sought to leave us signs to remind us of His existence and the Kingdom of Heaven. In the first chapter of his Epistle to the Romans, Saint Paul the Apostle speaks about the fact that through the act of intellectual reflection, we can deduce the existence of the Creator from His creatures. Based on this teaching, the saints have often spoken about vestigia Dei —the ‘traces’ left by God in creation. Pagan wise men, like Pythagoras, Socrates, and Plato, systematically meditated on the significance of certain elements of creation that prove the existence of a divine intellect that designed everything that exists. And yet, despite these traces, we still do not see the unseen world directly.

Read More »

Francis’s Synod: Making Reparation to Satan for Catholicism’s Offenses Against Hell

How did Archbishop Lefebvre see so clearly the problems that many sincere Catholics are seeing for the first time today, if at all? Or, for that matter, how did Bishop Graber recognize that Vatican II was implementing the Freemasonic attacks on the Church, as he wrote in his 1974 book? It is not necessarily that they knew more than everyone else — instead, it seems that they were willing to acknowledge the plainly observable realties and draw logical conclusions, even when Rome insisted that everyone must obey.

Read More »