The Church with No Knees ©

In a land full of pews and of bells and of smoke,
There once stood a Church — but it started to choke.
It choked on its incense, it choked on its pride,
It painted its altars and let Truth slide.

There once was a time it was sturdy and bold,
With statues and silence and chalices gold.
But now it’s all tambourines, handshakes and lights,
With priests who wear sneakers and bishops in tights.

They used to teach sin — now they just say “mistake.”
They used to say “fast” — now they say “take a break!”
They used to preach Christ — now it’s all “let’s be nice.”
No more Ten Commandments, just lukewarm advice.

The dogma? Diluted. The Latin? All gone.
The silence? Replaced with a sing-along song.
They preach Mother Earth and the climate and pride,
But won’t speak of Hell — now that they just hide.

The Pope tweets of migrants and melting ice caps,
While cardinals lounge in theological naps.
The shepherds wear mitres but speak like the mob,
And Peter, poor Peter — he’s out of a job.

The candles are plastic, the homilies canned,
The Mass is a pageant — not sacred, but bland.
And back in the choir, where angels once wept,
Now “On Eagles’ Wings” is sung while folks slept.

But somewhere out there, past the smoke and the spin,
A remnant remembers what burned deep within.
A fire that won’t flicker, a flame that won’t die,
A truth that won’t change when the winds of men lie.

So yes — let them dance, let them prance, let them clown,
Let them spin up their Church till it all tumbles down.
Because when it falls — and fall it shall do —
The Bride will stand up. Not painted. But true.

She’ll rise from the rubble with incense and steel,
With silence that cuts and a sword that can heal.
And Peter will weep, and the Rock will grow warm —
When fire returns
in its
righteous
form.

Papal Gold ©️

If the papal conclave chooses a progressive successor to Pope Francis, the Roman Catholic Church may be stepping not into renewal, but into its dissolution. While cloaked in the language of compassion and modernity, a further lurch toward progressivism would not revitalize the Church’s core—it would hollow it. This isn’t just a political drift. It’s a metaphysical rupture. The Catholic Church, for two millennia, has survived plagues, wars, schisms, and reformations by being what the world was not—unchanging, unbending, and immovable in its metaphysical foundation. The Church stood like a granite altar amid the floodwaters of time. But a progressive pontiff would make that altar porous. Soft. Digestible. And in doing so, it would cease to be a refuge.

Progressivism in the papacy often translates into moral relativism. It embraces ambiguity where there was once clarity, dialogue where there was once declaration, and sensitivity where there was once sanctity. While these might resonate in secular governance, they rot spiritual authority from within. If the next pope continues this path—endorsing soft stances on issues like same-sex blessings, communion for the divorced and remarried, or relativistic interfaith universalism—then the priesthood will fracture. The bishops will whisper rebellion. And most importantly, the laity will drift—some into schism, others into nihilism.

The decay won’t be dramatic. It will be fungal—slow, quiet, and deadly. Dioceses in Europe and North America are already collapsing under the weight of irrelevance, their pews empty, their seminaries barren. Progressive theology makes God into a therapist and the Mass into a moral suggestion box. But the hungry soul doesn’t want suggestions. It wants salvation. If the Church forgets this, then something else will rise to remember it.

And so a reformation brews—not led by princes or popes, but by desperate believers craving iron truth. It will begin underground. In Latin Masses whispered in barns. In digital catacombs. In breakaway orders and outlaw bishops. These won’t be extremists—they will be guardians. What they protect is not nostalgia, but the Logos itself.

If the conclave picks a progressive pope, they may believe they are choosing evolution. What they are really choosing is eclipse.

And the faithful will not go quietly into that darkness.