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What Went Wrong at EWTN?
Hoping to avoid a takeover by the American bishops, Mother
Angelica resigned from the board of directors of the Eternal Word
Television Network (EWTN) in March of 2000. She relinquished all
control over the network she had founded in 1981. With the departure
of that feisty and combative nun, EWTN underwent a change for the
worse.
This sure-to-be-controversial book contends that since the
departure of its foundress, EWTN has been purveying to millions of
Catholics a strange brew of the orthodox and the heterodox, the
sacred and the profane. The anti-liberal Popes before the Second
Vatican Council (1962-1965) would have viewed much of EWTN’s content
as Modernist corruptions of the Faith.
Pope Saint Pius X condemned Modernism as a deadly system of
errors. The Modernist views every aspect of the Faith—from liturgy,
to doctrine and dogma, to Catholic practices and devotions—as
subject to change and “updating” in keeping with “modern times.” St.
Pius declared: “[T]here is no part of Catholic truth from which they
hold their hand, none that they do not strive to corrupt.”
Basing itself on extensive evidence taken from EWTN’s own
content, and comparing that content to the perennial belief and
practice of the Church, the book shows that EWTN’s “moderately
Modernist” version of the Faith is precisely what St. Pius X had in
view when he condemned Modernism in all its forms, including what
His Holiness called “the Modernist as reformer.”
The book places the problem with EWTN in the larger context of
the post-Vatican II crisis in the Church, which resulted from a
Modernist insurrection during and after the Council.
The author notes that this breakthrough, with all its disastrous
consequences, was foreseen by the future Pope Pius XII when he was
still Vatican Secretary of State. Referring to “the Blessed Virgin’s
messages to little Lucy of Fatima,” the future Pope spoke of “this
persistence of Mary about the dangers which menace the Church.” He
warned of the Modernist “innovators” all around him in the Church,
who were poised to attempt “the suicide of altering the faith, in
her liturgy, her theology and her soul.” He predicted that “a day
will come… when the Church will doubt as Peter doubted.”
Four years after the death of Pius XII in 1958, that day came
with the commencement of the Second Vatican Council. Forty years
after the Council’s conclusion, any reasonable observer of the
postconciliar crisis in the Church would agree that Pius XII’s dire
warnings, uttered in light of the prophecy of the Mother of God at
Fatima, have come to pass. The Modernist “innovators” have
triumphed, and the Church has been afflicted by a collapse of faith
and discipline on a scale not seen since the Arian heresy spread
throughout nearly the entire Church in the fourth century.
The author shows that the “moderately Modernist” version of Roman
Catholicism EWTN purveys on television and over the Internet to
millions of Catholics embodies much of what the “innovators” feared
by Pius XII had in mind. The result is far more insidious than any
open heresy, for EWTN’s “fans” are induced to imbibe spiritual
poison along with seeming spiritual goods. The unwary thus accept
under the guise of orthodoxy many of the errors and abuses the
Church condemned before the Council.
At the same time, EWTN uses its power and influence to
marginalize as “extreme traditionalists” faithful Catholics who try
to defend their Church against “the suicide of altering the faith,
in her liturgy, her theology, and her soul,” which EWTN is helping
to advance.
The author demonstrates that while EWTN holds itself out as the
gold standard of Catholic orthodoxy today, it is actually a major
promoter of Modernist innovation in the Church. EWTN is therefore a
major obstacle to the widespread return to traditional Catholic
belief and practice in all its integrity—the only way to end the
crisis in the Church. Catholics thus have a duty to oppose what EWTN
is doing and to call for its correction.
This book will shock and outrage many, but the overwhelming
evidence it presents will convince the open-minded that EWTN is
indeed “a network gone wrong.”
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