President Donald Trump praised a letter written to him by the the Holy See’s former ambassador to Washington that warns of an “orchestrated media narrative” seeking to “legitimize violence and crime” rather than fight racism and bring about justice.
- Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano said there is an eternal struggle between good and evil as well as two sides that have formed in recent years: “the children of light and the children of darkness.”
- The children of darkness could “easily” be identified with “the deep state,” Vigano wrote.
- “So honored by Archbishop Viganò’s incredible letter to me,” Trump said Wednesday evening. “I hope everyone, religious or not, reads it!”
President Donald Trump praised a letter written to him by Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, the Holy See’s former ambassador to Washington, warning of an “orchestrated media narrative” which seeks to “legitimize violence and crime” rather than fight racism and bring about justice.
As riots and protests raged throughout the United States, Vigano wrote a June 7 letter published in LifeSiteNews to the president warning of an eternal struggle between good and evil.
“In society, Mr. President, these two opposing realities co-exist as eternal enemies, just as God and Satan are eternal enemies. And it appears that the children of darkness – whom we may easily identify with the deep state which you wisely oppose and which is fiercely waging war against you in these days – have decided to show their cards, so to speak, by now revealing their plans,” Vigano wrote.
The rioting comes after the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for several minutes, video of the incident showed. Derek Chauvin, the officer, has been fired and arrested on second-degree murder and manslaughter charges.
Vigano said the attacks and criticism the president received after visiting the National Shrine of St. John Paul II are “part of the orchestrated media narrative which seeks not to fight racism and bring social order, but to aggravate dispositions; not to bring justice, but to legitimize violence and crime; not to serve the truth, but to favor one political faction.”
“For the first time, the United States has in you a President who courageously defends the right to life, who is not ashamed to denounce the persecution of Christians throughout the world, who speaks of Jesus Christ and the right of citizens to freedom of worship,” Vigano told Trump.
Trump’s participation in the March for Life and his proclamation of April as National Child Abuse Prevention Month confirm that “both of us are on the same side in this battle,” Vigano said.
“It will not be surprising if, in a few months, we learn once again that hidden behind these acts of vandalism and violence there are those who hope to profit from the dissolution of the social order so as to build a world without freedom: Solve et Coagula, as the Masonic adage teaches,” Vigano adds.
Vigano also emphasized to Trump that he constantly prays for the “beloved American nation” and for Trump and his allies. Trump thanked the Holy See’s former ambassador to Washington for the letter in a Wednesday evening tweet.
No comments:
Post a Comment