Bannon`s War Room
WarRoom battleground EP 875: Catholic Bishop Marries, Non-Catholics Receive Eucharist, INVADERS Fake Baptism, Anglicans In Schism
22 Oct 2025
Chapter 1: What are the implications of a Catholic bishop marrying?
This is the primal scream of a dying regime. Pray for our enemies, because we're going medieval on these people. I got a free shot on all these networks lying about the people. The people have had a belly full of it. I know you don't like hearing that. I know you try to do everything in the world to stop that, but you're not going to stop it. It's going to happen.
And where do people like that go to share the big lie? Mega media. I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience.
Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. War Room. Here's your host, Stephen K. Bann.
Wednesday 22nd of October, anno domini 2025.
Chapter 2: How are non-Catholics receiving the Eucharist in the Catholic Church?
Hanwell here at the helm at Steve Bannon's War Room. This is that little portion of the week when we get to analyse, go behind the scenes. of all things Christian, and as happens to be the case week after week after week, specifically of things that aren't going quite right in the Catholic Church. That's not by any particular design on our part. It's just the way the news cycle works.
And there was much going wrong in the Catholic Church. Just want to respond before we get fully underway to something that comes up occasionally in comments that I do read. I read all the comments on Getter and Rumble to these shows.
We're not doing this show because we hate the Catholic Church, or we want to cause scandal, or we want to create difficulties with Catholics living their private lives. We're doing this job, we believe, as a service, using our full right as laity to hold... our bishops and cardinals to account when they are not performing their duties in defending the flock.
Now, how everyone does that is a prudential matter. Catholics of goodwill can differ on the correct approach. But that's what we're doing. Whereas most of the other Catholic, so-called Catholic media, when they accidentally bump into the truth, they just quickly get up, push themselves down, check that no one saw, and carry on, right?
Chapter 3: What is the controversy surrounding INVADERS fake baptism?
We don't do that on the war room. If we see something that's not right and we want to change it for the sake of the church, out of love for the church, we get our pointy finger out and we pluck at that scab As a service. So, without any further ado, bring on our usual three scab pluckers in chief. Frank Walker, Liz, you're Jenny Holland. Let's get our pointing fingers out.
No, because you're looking at the news that we're going to cover today. This really is why this show exists. We try to underline how much the Catholic Church hierarchy hates you, the faithful Catholic sitting in the pew. Sunday after Sunday, so that you might use that anger to power forward and affect some kind of change. And how that is going to work out, we don't know yet.
What we're doing now is just trying to, spreading the truth can never be a disservice, right? Spreading the truth in charity, that's our obligation to do. And I think the first story up today is just absolutely perfect as an indication of how much
Chapter 4: How does the Anglican Communion respond to internal schisms?
Your Catholic hierarchy hates you and holds you in contempt. Why? As Frank Walker will explain to us, what has gone on in Peru, which is the backyard of our current Pope. Let's see what the canonical penalties are. Let's see about the canonical processes that are launched against this bishop. And I tell you why.
Because when it comes to the laity, when it comes, all we want to do is be able to go to the traditional mass in peace. That's when they clamp down. That's when they do the full length. You know, you must obey that Rome has spoken. The case is closed. That's when it comes to us, the laity.
When it comes to they themselves, the bishops, who are running this church into the ground, they give themselves a free reign to do what they want. And they do what they want with the tradition of the church. So they impose the novelties on us and prohibit from us the things that are our birthright as Catholics and give themselves the free permission to
Chapter 5: What are the canonical penalties for bishops violating church laws?
Frank, why don't you tell us what's going on in Peru?
Well, in addition to cracking down on the Latin mass, they also say call the FBI. So that's another thing that happens. In Peru, there's a bishop, Bishop Reinhold Nan, who has been, you know, he resigned at 63. And he said he resigned because he was... feeling he has some sickness for illness. That kind of thing happens a lot.
Since we got Francis, there's been a number of bishops who resigned for health reasons at a young age. This is 63, young age to resign. You don't have to resign until at least 75.
And as we come to find out, after he goes through some counseling and he deals with depression and he says that he was, you know, all of the negativity of rising, the higher he rose, the more he was overwhelmed by all the negativity. He's such a snowflake. And he admits that love was the real cause for him leaving. And then at some point,
Along the line, he has a contract, a civil marriage with a woman who loves him.
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Chapter 6: How does the Catholic hierarchy's actions affect the laity?
And that he now lives with.
This is love. Frank Walker, this is love. This is L-U-R-V-E, right? Yeah. I just want to clarify what you said there. Because that's exactly... As you say, that's exactly his justification.
He says he struck up a relationship in the face of loneliness that he encountered as a bishop facing the, and I quote, the abysses, the tragedies, abuse, mediocrity and lies, which he encountered the higher up the hierarchy of. that he climbed. And I'm thinking, well, I actually know of somebody who'd climbed quite high up that hierarchy.
Um, and that person is now the reputed Pope of the Roman Catholic church. Um, Abysses, tragedies, abuse, mediocrity and lies. It's not a great way to describe your fellow bishops.
Chapter 7: What role does love play in the resignations of clergy?
But anyway, I don't mean to interrupt you. I just thought what he was saying there, whether he meant or not, and presumably he did not mean to do it, actually encapsulates the then Cardinal Prevost. Do go on, Frank.
Well, I mean, it must be a terribly hard job. I would think it'd be a hard job. I'm sure there are plenty of abysses and tragedies in there. And he has floated around back and forth, considering leaving the priesthood, going back. And it even says in this, if you read in here, that he's fallen in love many times already before. The thing is that he didn't really apply.
He didn't go through the processes of getting laicized, of asking for it. He just went ahead and did everything that he wanted to do. And now at this Pillar article, they say the position is to really punish him. And he has to ask to go through the process of laicization.
And on top of that, he has to ask in order to be freed from celibacy, because the continence and the celibacy that comes along with the clerical state is very important. And there's a mark on your soul that goes back thousands of years, even with a priest and her married that's connected to the sacraments and the mass and everything.
Chapter 8: How do recent events challenge traditional Christian beliefs?
This guy is just like, he's sort of like a child, you know? It's like he's never had to straighten up because he lives in this environment where he has everything he wants. He has the money and the faithful. It's sort of like criminals who, like Mafioso, who invaded an orchestra or tried to fly a jet plane or something.
You can't figure out if he's being incompetent or if he's being just nefarious about the whole thing because... when you read about his knowledge of doctrine is so terrible, the, he calls celibacy crass, you know, and now he's going to live out the life of the, of the priesthood that we all have in regular life. So,
You're absolutely right about his childhood. I see Liz, you're shaking your head. I'll go to Liz then in a moment. But you're absolutely right to talk about his immaturity. His self-justification is depression was the reason for the resignation. Love was the cause.
Liz, I don't even know if a bishop who's not been released from the clerical state, who's still a bishop, still a priest, I don't even think that he can actually canonically, that is to say in the eyes of the church, actually get married. And that's why the issue of canonical penalties, canonical crimes called delicts come up.
Yeah, that's absolutely correct. But I have a more cynical view. I mean, leave it up to a German bishop, a German Lothario, who is, I think this is a test case. Strange, isn't it, that he spent much of his clerical career in Peru? not unlike our Pope. I think, you know, we know that the German bishops are forcing this issue of married priests, nuns as priests, gay marriage.
I believe that this bishop is forcing the issue on the new Pope. And so I'm very cynical about this. It's coming up very quickly in this issue. in this papacy, I think there's going to be a number of German bishops that get behind him. And it's also quite curious that he decided he was not going to go through any canonical process. He was going to
assert his own self-interest throughout this entire process. And so I'm very suspicious of this. I'm very suspicious of the German, radical German bishops conference that has really been, you know, as far left as you can get in the Catholic church. So I think we should watch this. And, you know, remember we were all told gay marriage, it's all about love. It's just about love.
Love is the most important thing. Well, here he is mouthing those words with respect to his latest dalliance. So that's my cynical view of this. And I think we need to take a close look at this and watch it very carefully.
Frank Walker, Liz, Liz, you was absolutely correct. Isn't she? When she says this, this is actually a Bishop who though he's retired now, he wasn't a diocesan Bishop. It doesn't really matter technically what he was, but he was just to be precise about this.
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