The errors the modern world calls “progress,” Pope Gregory XVI called what they were: poison. He said so in writing, in 1832. Almost nobody talks about it.
In 1832, Pope Gregory XVI issued Mirari Vos — “On Liberalism and Religious Indifferentism” — the first social encyclical in Church history. Written in the violent aftermath of the French Revolution, with liberal uprisings tearing Europe apart and the Papal States under armed assault, Gregory XVI did what no one in our age dares to do: he condemned the foundations of the modern world by name.
Religious indifferentism. False freedom of conscience. The so-called freedom of the press. The separation of Church and State. One encyclical. Four pillars of modern civilization — condemned.
📜 WHAT MIRARI VOS CONDEMNED:
Religious indifferentism — the lie that all religions lead to salvation
False freedom of conscience — the claim that men have a “right” to reject the true Faith
Freedom of the press as a vehicle for moral poison and doctrinal error
The separation of Church and State as an assault on divine order
🕊 IN THIS VIDEO:
The historical crisis that forced Gregory XVI to write
A full breakdown of Mirari Vos’s core condemnations
Why every condemned error is now mainstream Western doctrine
What faithful Catholics living in Babylon must understand about this forgotten encyclical
📖 READ MIRARI VOS FOR YOURSELF:
Mirari Vos — On Liberalism and Religious Indifferentism – Pope Gregory XVI – 1832
Full Text https://www.papalencyclicals.net/greg16/g16mirar.htm