Re: “Interfaith support for nuclear arms treaty,” That All May Be One, (Dec. 24). Father Joseph Wallace’s column is a vivid reminder of all that is wrong with ecumenism, when he writes of various faiths support of a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START). He forgets Our Lady of Fatima’s warning that, unless her requests are fulfilled (the consecration of Russia to her Immaculate Heart), we risk the “annihilation of many nations”; as well as her warning at Akita, Japan in 1973 that, “fire will fall from the sky”!
Father Wallace just doesn’t get it! He fawns over various other religions in his attempt to show how “all may be one” without realizing that what Mary said at Fatima was anti-ecumenism.
Did Our Lady come to Fatima to proclaim Christian unity through ecumenism? Of course not! Ecumenism denies her messages given at Fatima where she reinforced Catholic dogmas and traditions with emphasis on heaven, hell, purgatory, the last judgment and her Son’s Real presence in the Eucharist.
In the book, “Ecumenism,” written by a freemason, we find these words, “The goal is no longer the destruction of the church, but rather to make use of it by infiltrating it.” According to the freemason magazine, “Le Symbolisme,” published in 1962, “Freemasonry wants to be a super-church which will bring all churches together in her bosom.” In 1908, the Catholic Dictionary made no mention of ecumenism; yet, by 1965, there were seven pages on the ecumenical movement. Exactly as (St.) Pope Pius X had warned!
While it’s great that Bishops like Hubbard and Dolan are on board with a new START treaty, wouldn’t it be more meaningful if they called on all the bishops to do heaven’s will and ask the pope to make the consecration of Russia, as asked for by Our Lady of Fatima, in order to bring about true peace?
I’ll give the final say to Mikhail Gorbachev, with whom Father Wallace is so enamored, “There must be no letup in the war against religion, because as long as it exists, Communism cannot prevail. We must intensify the obliteration of all religions wherever they are practiced or taught.” Sounds somewhat ecumenical, does it not?
Frank Malloy
Bellmawr











