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Jun 30 24 tweets 7 min read Read on X
🧵 A THREAD by TOC: Political Omissions in the Lectionary—A Silent Strike Against Scripture & Sacred Tradition?

On today’s Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul, let’s talk about the verses we don’t hear—and why it matters. 👇 Image
1.1/ Much critique of the Novus Ordo (NO) Mass centers on reverence and ritual.

But here’s a deeper issue: the lectionary itself.

What if I told you key verses of Scripture were being intentionally omitted?

Let’s talk about the silence no one notices. 👇 Image
1.2/ I’ll admit, prior to today, I had NO idea lectionaries were modified purposely to exclude key teachings of our faith! As the lector read the first reading today, he ended one verse shy.

I knew something was amiss! But I’ve never heard anyone speak about this! Image
2/ Acts 12:11 - Peter says: “Now I know for certain the Lord sent His angel & rescued me from Herod & from all that the Jewish people had been expecting.”

Many NO parishes cut the reading at v10. That means Peter’s divine rescue statement is omitted—on the feast of Peter & Paul Image
3/ Why omit verse 11?

Because it mentions “the Jewish people’s expectations.”

Liturgists call it “pastoral sensitivity.”
Critics call it editing Scripture for politics.
4/ It doesn’t end there.

🔹 Romans 1:18–32 — a clear denunciation of sexual immorality

“Males did shameful things with males…”

❌ Completely absent from the Novus Ordo lectionary.

Too controversial? Too “divisive”?
Or just too true? Image
5/🔹 1 Corinthians 11:27–29 “[Whoever eats or drinks unworthily… eats and drinks judgment.]”

The Early Church quoted this constantly on the Eucharist.

The TLM still reads it on Corpus Christi.

The NO?

❌ Never included. Image
6/🔹 Galatians 5:19–21
“Those who do such things will not inherit the Kingdom of God.”

In the NO, it’s often truncated—we get the “fruits of the Spirit” but not the warning of damnation.

Sin is bad for morale, apparently. Image
7/🔹 Dies Irae – The “Day of Wrath” hymn from Requiem Masses

“Day of wrath and doom impending…”

Removed from the funeral liturgy in the Novus Ordo.

Not because it’s false.

Because it’s uncomfortable. Image
8/ But the Early Church didn’t shy away from these truths.

St. Martyr: “We do not receive [Eucharist] if we are in grave sin.”

St. Chrysostom: “You receive unworthily, you’re guilty of the Body & Blood.”

Didache: “Let no one in sin join the Eucharist.”

None had “short forms.” Image
9/ So how did we get here?

➡️In the 1970s–1990s, liturgical committees began offering short forms of readings in the Novus Ordo.

➡️Ostensibly for “time” or “accessibility,” but in practice?

➡️They tend to exclude the hardest, most doctrinally uncomfortable verses.
10/ This isn’t just about length.
It’s about content.

And when the liturgy routinely omits warnings about sin, judgment, unworthy Communion, and divine punishment—that’s not pastoral.

That’s deception by omission. Image
11/ This all came home today.

Today is the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul.

At my parish, the reading from Acts 12 stopped at verse 10.

But verse 11 is Peter’s whole realization—the climax.

It was gone!
12/ So I ran a poll on Catholic Twitter.

Over 1000 people responded so far:

33% said verse 11 was omitted at their Mass

29% said it was included

25% weren’t sure

13% didn’t attend

Even allowing for memory gaps—that’s a huge split for a solemnity. Image
13/ The U.S. lectionary officially includes verse 11, but short forms are widely used.

Sometimes priests or lectors stop early, knowingly or not.

This isn’t just theory. It’s real, lived liturgical distortion.
14/ This naturally raises questions.
Some would say: “See? The Novus Ordo isn’t even a legitimate form.”
I’m not ready to go there.

But we can’t ignore the pattern.

A rite that permits or encourages the omission of hard truths has a structural problem.
15/ But is the Traditional Latin Mass (TLM) immune?

No rite is perfect.

The TLM has shorter readings and a 1-year cycle.

But—and this matters—it does not redact doctrine.

The TLM doesn’t skip judgment, hell, or sin to protect your feelings. Image
16/ Examples?

1 Cor 11 is read on Corpus Christi

Romans 1 appears in weekday or Ember day readings

No “short forms”

No edits for political correctness

Its readings are sometimes fewer—but never sanitized.
17/ So what does this all mean?

✅Scripture matters

✅Omission is a form of instruction

✅Editing God’s Word—even softly—shapes the faith of the people

The Mass is supposed to form our minds to God, not conform God to us.
18/ We don’t need a liturgy that flatters modern sensitivities.

We need one that proclaims the full Word of God, even the hard parts.

ESPECIALLY the hard parts!

Truth saves. Silence doesn’t.
19/ This isn’t about nostalgia.

It’s about fidelity.

If the Early Church preached these truths…

If the Fathers defended them…

If the saints died for them…

Who are we to quietly snip them out for comfort? Image
20/🧭 Summary:

🔵The NO lectionary often omits or shortens key verses

🔵These edits tend to remove difficult teachings

🔵The TLM preserves the fullness of Scripture—no “safe mode”

We must ask: What is our liturgy teaching by what it refuses to say?
21/ 🛑 CALL TO ACTION

We urge our bishops—and especially the @USCCB @Pontifex to address these omissions

The faithful deserve the full Word of God, not a version trimmed for comfort.

Reform the lectionary. End the short forms. Preach the hard truths.

Lex orandi, lex credendi
💬 What do you think?

Have you noticed omissions like this in your parish?

Do you trust the lectionary you’re hearing?

Let’s talk. The Word of God deserves to be heard—in full.

Pax Vobiscum 🙏

#CatholicTwitter #TLM #NovusOrdo #SacredTradition #LiturgyMatters #LexOrandi

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More from @RealOrdCatholic

Jun 20
🚨 A THREAD by TOC: The Church is not Plan B. She is the true Israel—the fulfillment, not replacement. If you’ve been told otherwise, this may challenge what you’ve heard. Let’s walk through Scripture and Tradition. 🧵👇 Image
1/ Many believe Jews remain God's “Chosen People” after rejecting Christ. But what do Scripture, Tradition, and the early Church actually teach? Let’s explore the Catholic view of the New Israel. Image
2/ God chose Israel: “You only have I known…” (Amos 3:2). But the covenant was conditional—dependent on faithfulness (Deut 28).

The Messiah was the covenant’s climax, not a side note. Image
Read 27 tweets
May 31
🧵 1/ One of the great errors in modern Christianity is this:

People shape religion around their preferences, instead of allowing religion to shape them.

Faith becomes comfort—not conversion.

Therapy—not transformation.

Let’s talk theology. A thread by TOC Image
2/ This mindset was amplified during the Reformation.

Doctrines like sola fide (faith alone) taught many that salvation requires belief—but not necessarily moral transformation, sacramental life, or obedience.

Faith became reduced to feeling. Image
3/ But Scripture doesn’t support salvation by passive belief.

“You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone.” James 2:24

Faith is essential—but it must do something. It must bear fruit. Image
Read 14 tweets
May 29
1/ Most Christians pray these words every day: "Give us this day our daily bread."

But what if Jesus wasn’t just talking about food?

The original Greek unlocks something much deeper—and profoundly Eucharistic.

Let’s break it down! A daily thread by TOC 🧵👇 Image
2/ Jesus didn’t say “daily” bread in Greek.

He said epiousios—a word so rare, it appears only here in the Bible.

It’s almost untranslatable. But Church tradition renders it as: “super-substantial” bread.

Bread not just for the body—but for the soul. Image
3/ St. Jerome, translating the Latin Vulgate, chose:

Panem nostrum supersubstantialem


“Our super-substantial bread.”

This wasn’t about breakfast. It was about the Eucharist.

Christ Himself, hidden in the prayer He gave us. Image
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1/🧵 Part 2 of 3—The Catholic Mass is not only rooted in Scripture—it is where the entire story of salvation history is fulfilled and made present.

From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible leads us to the altar. Let’s explore how the Mass is Scripture in action. A thread by TOC. Image
2/ The Bible was never meant to be a book alone.
It’s a liturgical document, born from the Church’s worship and meant to be proclaimed and enacted.
At every Mass, we don’t just read the Bible—we walk into it.
3/ The Mass is structured around two major parts:
Liturgy of the Word – the Scripture proclaimed
Liturgy of the Eucharist – the Word made flesh, received
This is the pattern found in Luke 24:13–35 on the road to Emmaus:
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May 16
1/ A Thread By TOC: “Did Mary Have Other Children?” —Debunking a Persistent Lie:

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2/ First, let's talk about the word "brother."

In modern English, “bro” or “brother” often means “friend,” “teammate,” or “fellow believer.”

You’d never call your actual sibling “bro” to their face. You call them by their name.

This matters. Stick with me.
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Cousin
Kinsman
Fellow disciple
Tribal relation
Literal brother

Context matters.
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May 3
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Many reformers claim that Catholics don’t read or know the Bible. But in reality, every single part of the Mass is rooted in Scripture. Let’s set the record straight. ⬇️ Image
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The priest begins with, “In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” This is based on Matthew 28:19, where Jesus commands, “Go... baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” Image
3/ The Entrance Antiphon
The priest greets us: “The Lord be with you.” This is straight from Ruth 2:4: “The Lord be with you.” Even in the Old Testament, the people of God greeted each other with this phrase, pointing to God's presence.
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