Pope Francis Finds an Enemy

Clement Pulaski
Daily Stormer
August 5, 2013

 

Pope Francis waves to crowds as he arrives to his inauguration mass on 19 March 2013.

We have recently covered Pope Francis’ friendly statements about  Jews and sodomites, two traditional enemies of the Catholic Church.  It turns out, however, that some traditional enemies are still on the Pope’s bad list.  When explaining his view on homosexuality and the “homosexual lobby” Francis said:

The problem is not having this [homosexual] orientation. No, we must be brothers and sisters. The problem is lobbying for this orientation, or lobbies of greed, political lobbies, Masonic lobbies, so many lobbies. This is the most serious problem for me.

While the Pope has tried to alter the image of the Church by appearing “compassionate” towards sodomites and Jews, he voluntarily brought up the “Masonic lobby” as a serious enemy.   The Vatican has long viewed Freemasonry as incompatible with the Catholic faith, and by specifically naming the Masonic lobby one might suspect that the Pope is throwing a bone to traditionalist Catholics who are understandably concerned about many of his recent statements.   But painting himself as an enemy of Freemasonry is a completely safe move, one that will not draw criticism from the liberal mainstream press Francis so loves.  Freemasonry has certainly been a subversive force in Western society, but its power today is negligible compared to that wielded by the Jewish or homosexual lobbies.  Attacking the “Masonic lobby” will not bring down a torrent of condemnation, and fighting Masonic influence while allowing Jewish power to flourish will do nothing to combat modernism, and Francis knows this.