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Most Holy Family Monastery
Most Holy Family Monastery
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Most Holy Family Monastery is an American sedevacantist traditionalist Catholic organisation, based in Fillmore, New York. The monastery was founded by Joseph Natale in the late 1960s, a Benedictine Catholic lay postulant who had attended the Saint Vincent Archabbey in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. Instead of taking vows with them, Natale left and set up his own monastery with a focus on the disabled with himself as Superior, living according to the Rule of St. Benedict. In the mid-1980s it had 10 monks, but by 1994 its numbers had dwindled to 3.[1]

Key Information

The monastery is not approved by the local Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo,[2] and opposes the Second Vatican Council and the New Order of Mass. The monastery explicitly adopted sedevacantism in the 1990s when it came under the leadership of two brothers, (self proclaimed Brother) Michael and Peter [nee Frederick and Robert] Dimond. Under their leadership, the monastery gained a significant online presence promoting conspiracy theories through its website VaticanCatholic.com and social media.

History

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The monastery's founder was Joseph Natale (1933-1995), who needed crutches to walk after contracting tuberculosis of the bone at the age of four.[1][3] Natale entered the Saint Vincent Archabbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, in 1960 as a lay postulant, but left less than a year later to start his own religious community. According to an archivist of Saint Vincent Archabbey, Natale left before taking vows; he never actually became a Benedictine monk.[1]

In 1967, a benefactor helped Natale purchase a property in Berlin, New Jersey to found a community there together with seven other men with disabilities. However, as there was only a small house there at the time and these men were unable to assist with the construction, Natale sent them away until the monastery could be finished. In subsequent years, Natale's vision for the institution changed. Natale started focusing more on what he perceived as guarding the Catholic religion against acts of the Church's hierarchy which Natale regarded as destructive of "the light of true Catholicism", such as the suppression of the Tridentine Mass and permission for use of natural family planning.[3] By the mid-1970s, the monastery had broken off entirely from the institutional Church.[1]

The monastery's chapel, named the St. Jude Shrine in honor of the "patron saint of hopeless causes," was blessed and dedicated on June 8, 1980.[4] By 1987, the weekly service celebrated in this chapel was drawing about 150 worshipers each Sunday,[3] and Michael Cuneo reported at the time of his visit in mid-1994 that the Sunday service was attended by "between two and three hundred people".[1]

Initially incorporated in 1993 as the Queen of Angels Corp, the monastery is a New York Domestic Not-For-Profit Corporation under the business type "religious organization".[5]

Natale died in 1995, whereupon Michael Dimond (born Frederick Dimond[6]), was elected his successor as Superior. Michael Dimond had joined in 1992 at the age of 19, after converting to Catholicism four years earlier.[7]

As of 2020, the monastery maintains a website which states that no one should receive communion or attend mass at any Catholic parish (including any sedevacantist groups), since they all preach heresies such as the doctrine of baptism of desire. However, they advise their followers to receive the sacrament of confession from Eastern Catholic priests, or from Latin Church priests ordained before 1968, when the Second Vatican Council changed the rite of ordination for the Latin Church.[8]

Claims of miraculous experience

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According to Michael Cuneo, who researched various traditionalist movements in the USA, Natale claimed he had a gift of prophecy:[1]

Even before Vatican II was finished, I knew, and knew absolutely, that it was part of a Communist conspiracy to destroy the Church. The bishops at the council wanted to democratize Catholicism, they wanted an egalitarian theology, and most of them were secret communists and Masons. They knew exactly what they were doing. My community here was the first one in the United States to see the council for what it really was, and we rejected it completely.

— Joseph Natale (as quoted by Michael Cuneo), Smoke of Satan (1999), p. 88

"Regardless of what you have been told, John Paul I did not die of natural causes. He was murdered. Shortly after his election I went into a kind of trance and was told that John Paul I would be murdered because he wanted to return the Church to its traditions. He was murdered by his own. The Communist infiltrators in the Vatican and the College of Cardinals, working together with the Masons, killed John Paul I. At the same time I also had a vision of John Paul II, and I was told that he would be the next pope and also that he would be an authentic pope, even though most of his actions would be controlled by Communist advisers and manipulators in the Vatican."

— Joseph Natale (as quoted by Michael Cuneo), Smoke of Satan (1999) pp. 88-89

Cuneo also reported that Natale told him that: "Five years [from 1994] is about all the time the world has left."[1]: 89 

Views

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The monastery's website refers to the Catholic Church as "the Vatican II sect,"[9] and heretical. All popes since, as manifest heretics, and are therefore incapable of being pope.[10]

The monastery's website condemns natural family planning.[11] The website regards statements from the Catholic Church condoning natural family planning from before Pius XII as "not infallible or binding" and in conflict with other Catholic teaching that they do consider infallible.[12] The monastery's position is noted by Mary Farrell Bednarowski as "an admittedly rare example of contemporary opposition".[13]

The monastery's website opposes the doctrines of baptism of desire and baptism of blood, and affirms that "outside the Catholic Church there is absolutely no salvation".[14][15]

The monastery's website embraces Holocaust denial, calling the Holocaust "[t]he propaganda hoax which has been so effectively used to cement Jewish power and influence in the world, and to silence any questioning of Jewish activities, support for Israel or a Jewish agenda [...] we work to expose Jewish domination and evil Jewish enterprises in the world, which (one must say) constitute the main power of the secular conspiracy."[16]

In 2008 the monastery published a book by Frederick Dimond ("Brother Michael") called UFOs: Demonic Activity & Elaborate Hoaxes Meant to Deceive Mankind.

Sacraments

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None of the members of the monastery have been ordained to the priesthood. They believe that the mass of Paul VI, instituted post-Vatican II, is invalid. They also hold that even the Tridentine Mass as permitted by Benedict XVI in his 2007 Summorum Pontificum, is a compromised form of liturgy, because the 1962 Roman Missal that he approved includes changes made by Pope John XXIII, who they believe to be an antipope (along with Benedict XVI himself). Previously, the monastery considered attending the Divine Liturgy at a Byzantine rite Catholic Church, in Rochester, New York, was appropriate; however the monastery now regards that too as inadvisable.[8]

Criticisms

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Catholic League

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In 1999, the Catholic League, in its annual report on anti-Catholicism, described the monastery as "a dissident organization that challenges [...] papal authority", referring to the monastery's publication of a pamphlet entitled "101 Heresies of Anti-Pope John Paul II".[17]

Southern Poverty Law Center listing

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The monastery has been listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group.[18] It places them in a category of adherents of "radical traditional Catholicism, or 'integrism'."[19] This category is said to "routinely pillory Jews as 'the perpetual enemy of Christ' and worse, reject the ecumenical efforts of the Vatican, and sometimes even assert that recent popes have all been illegitimate. They are incensed by the liberalizing reforms of the Second Vatican Council, which condemned antisemitism and the accusation that the Jewish people are collectively responsible for deicide in the form of the crucifixion of Christ in the document Nostra aetate."[19]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Most Holy Family Monastery is a sedevacantist traditionalist Catholic organization based in Fillmore, New York, led by brothers Michael Dimond and Peter Dimond, who style themselves as monks and produce materials advocating strict pre-Vatican II doctrines, including the rejection of all popes since Pius XII and an uncompromising interpretation of "outside the Church there is no salvation" that denies exceptions such as or blood. The group, incorporated as a nonprofit religious entity in 1993, emerged from earlier efforts like the Oblates of St. Jude founded in 1967 and adopted explicit under the Dimonds' leadership in the 1990s, with Michael Dimond elected superior in 1995 and taking before a they consider validly ordained. Their mission centers on exposing perceived heresies in the post-conciliar Church through videos, articles, books, and debates, emphasizing eschatological warnings, the reality of , and calls for conversion to what they term the true Catholic faith. While influential in certain online traditionalist circles for their detailed and refutations of modern or , MHFM faces sharp criticism from both mainstream and other traditionalist Catholics, who dispute the brothers' monastic claims—lacking formal or affiliation with recognized orders—and label their positions as schismatic or excessively rigorist, potentially implying for vast numbers of baptized individuals outside their narrow salvific framework. The organization's outputs, hosted on sites like vaticancatholic.com, prioritize first-hand scriptural and patristic arguments over institutional authority, reflecting a broader distrust of post-1958 structures amid ongoing debates over Vatican II's legitimacy.

History

Founding by the Dimond Brothers

Michael Dimond, born Frederick Dimond, joined in 1992 at the age of 19, shortly after graduating from high school and following his conversion to Catholicism around 1988. His brother, Peter Dimond, born Robert Dimond, also became involved in the during this period. The monastery itself traces its origins to 1967, when it was founded by Joseph Natale (1933–1995) in , initially as the Oblates of St. Jude, a intended for handicapped men under a Benedictine framework. Natale's death in 1995 marked a pivotal transition, with Michael Dimond elected as superior later that year. Under the Dimond brothers' leadership, the organization was formally incorporated as a New York not-for-profit religious entity on August 20, 1993, prior to Natale's passing but amid growing influence from the brothers. They relocated the community to Fillmore, New York, to a site originally developed in 1940 as a monastery consisting of four Quonset huts arranged in a quadrangle, where farming and production activities had previously occurred. The Dimonds reoriented the monastery's focus toward —a position rejecting the legitimacy of post-Vatican II popes—which became explicit in the under their direction, diverging from Natale's earlier anti-sedevacantist stance. Neither brother is an ordained , and their monastic vows and Benedictine claims have faced criticism as self-proclaimed and lacking validity from recognized authority. The brothers' assumption of control involved a shift from the original community's emphasis on care for the disabled to producing theological materials and media critiquing modern Catholicism, establishing the monastery's contemporary identity as a small, independent traditionalist outpost with no formal ties to broader Benedictine orders. This evolution occurred without external oversight, reflecting the Dimonds' independent interpretation of pre-Vatican II doctrines amid disputes over the founder's legacy.

Expansion and Media Development

Following the death of founder Brother Joseph Natale on November 11, 1995, Brother Michael Dimond was elected superior of Most Holy Family Monastery, leading to its relocation from southern to a rural property in , New York. The community had acquired 24 acres of land in New York in as part of Natale's earlier vision for expansion into a more isolated setting conducive to monastic life and traditional Catholic practice. The move was completed in late 1997, enabling the establishment of a permanent facility focused on perpetual adoration, the traditional Latin Mass, and production of religious materials. Under the Dimond brothers' leadership, the monastery expanded its media outreach significantly, producing and distributing nearly one million copies of videos, audios, DVDs, and by the early 2000s. These materials critiqued post-Vatican II changes in the , defended doctrines such as , refuted , and promoted devotions like the 15-decade . Key publications included booklets such as A Voice Crying in the Wilderness released around 2002, alongside multi-volume works on and heresies attributed to modern popes. The monastery's media efforts grew through mail-order distribution and, later, online platforms, with the establishment of vaticancatholic.com and endtimes.video hosting hundreds of videos on topics including apparitions, the , and sedevacantist arguments. This digital expansion facilitated broader outreach, reaching thousands via personal correspondence, newsletters, and free materials emphasizing the necessity of rejecting the post-Vatican II hierarchy. Critics, including mainstream Catholic organizations, have described these productions as promoting schismatic views, though the monastery maintains they align with pre-Vatican II teachings.

Recent Activities (2000s–Present)

In the 2000s, Most Holy Family Monastery shifted focus toward expanded media production following its relocation to Fillmore, New York, emphasizing video refutations of post-Vatican II doctrines and sedevacantist arguments. The brothers produced content including debates with critics and exposés on alleged heresies in the modern Church, distributed via emerging online platforms. The monastery faced multiple legal challenges during this period, often stemming from disputes with former associates. In 2008, a federal lawsuit accused MHFM and the Dimond brothers of "Benedictine fraud" and related claims tied to their rejection of Benedict XVI's papacy; the case concluded with granted to the defendants on March 21, 2014. Separately, Eric Hoyle filed suit alleging , , and deceptive practices over donations, but MHFM prevailed with in 2009, as ruled by a New York federal district court. From the onward, activities have centered on sustained digital outreach, with vaticancatholic.com hosting E-Exchanges documenting theological disputes, news updates, and audio programs defending positions like the necessity of water baptism. Video production continued unabated, including refutations of figures such as EWTN's and , alongside analyses of scandals like the "Voice of Reason" controversy. As of 2025, MHFM remains active in content creation, uploading videos on addressing current ecclesiastical issues and offering publications such as book-and-DVD packages for $5, including materials on and Church doctrine. Operations persist from their New York facility, prioritizing refutation of modernism without reported physical expansions or new foundations.

Leadership and Organization

Profiles of Michael and Peter Dimond

Michael Dimond, born Frederick Dimond and raised in a family without religious practice, converted to Catholicism at the age of 15. He joined Most Holy Family Monastery in 1992 at the age of 19, shortly after graduating from high school, and was elected superior of the community in late 1995 following the death of founder Joseph Natale. Under his leadership, the monastery relocated from New Hampshire to Fillmore, New York, in 1997 to fulfill Natale's wishes, and Dimond took final monastic vows before a validly ordained priest. As a lay brother rather than an ordained priest, Dimond has authored publications such as UFOs: Demonic Activity & Elaborate Hoaxes Meant to Deceive Mankind (2008) and serves as the primary figure in the monastery's video productions and theological arguments, often debating opponents via email exchanges and online content. Peter Dimond, born Robert Dimond and the biological brother of Michael, entered Most Holy Family Monastery shortly after Michael's arrival in the early . Like his brother, Peter operates as a without priestly and collaborates on the monastery's materials, including co-authoring responses to theological critiques and contributing to video explanations of sedevacantist positions. The brothers present themselves as Benedictine monks observing traditional monastic rules, though this claim has been contested by some traditional Catholic groups asserting lack of formal affiliation with recognized Benedictine orders.

Structure and Operations

Most Holy Family Monastery operates as a small, independent religious community claiming adherence to the Rule of St. Benedict, functioning without canonical recognition from any established Catholic hierarchy and self-governing under its elected superior. Founded in the by Brother Joseph Natale in southern and relocated to rural , New York, in late 1997, the community emphasizes monastic life centered on , study, and apostolic outreach via media production. Leadership is held by Brother Michael Dimond, O.S.B., who entered the monastery in 1992 and was elected superior in late 1995 following Natale's death; his brother, Peter Dimond, collaborates closely in doctrinal and production roles. The membership remains limited, historically comprising a handful of professed brothers and possibly lay associates, with operations effectively driven by the Dimond brothers rather than a larger monastic ensemble. Daily routines incorporate recitation of the full 150 , the 15-decade , and a minimum of four hours of theological study, alongside exclusive use of the traditional for and devotions to figures such as St. Benedict and St. Thérèse of Lisieux. Apostolic efforts focus on creating and disseminating materials—nearly one million copies of videos, DVDs, and books distributed—through websites, debates, and mail-order sales to advocate strict traditional Catholic positions. The organization sustains itself via donations and material sales from its Fillmore address at 4425 Schneider Road, without formal ties to broader Benedictine congregations.

Theological Positions

Sedevacantism and Rejection of Post-Vatican II Popes

The Most Holy Family Monastery espouses sedevacantism, asserting that the Holy See has remained vacant since the death of Pope Pius XII on October 9, 1958. They reject all subsequent papal claimants—from John XXIII through Francis—as antipopes, arguing that these figures promulgated heresies incompatible with defined Catholic dogma, thereby demonstrating their automatic loss of any claim to the office. This position rests on the principle, drawn from theologians like St. Robert Bellarmine, that a manifest heretic cannot be a member of the Church, let alone its visible head, as heresy effects a self-excommunication ipso facto under canon law and divine law. The monastery's primary evidence centers on the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965), which they deem a source of doctrinal errors proving the invalidity of its conveners' authority. For instance, the council's affirms a natural right to religious liberty, including public propagation of non-Catholic worship, which they contend directly contradicts infallible prior teachings, such as Pius IX's (1864) condemning indifferentism and Pius XI's Mortalium Animos (1928) prohibiting ecumenical gatherings that imply parity among religions. Likewise, Vatican II's emphasis on collegiality among bishops is viewed as diminishing , while its calls for dialogue with separated brethren undermine the Church's exclusive possession of truth. John XXIII's opening address on October 11, 1962, described the council as guided by the Church's "unfailing ," and Paul VI's promulgation speeches for each document invoked solemn formulas of confirmation, acts that—under Catholic teaching on —would bind the universal Church if issued by legitimate popes. The presence of novelties and contradictions in the texts, however, renders such claims impossible for true pontiffs, as the extraordinary cannot err in matters of faith and morals. The Dimond brothers thus interpret these events as fulfilling scriptural prophecies of a preceding the , with the post-Vatican II entity masquerading as the but constituting a . In practice, this rejection entails non-recognition of post-1958 ecclesiastical acts dependent on papal authority, including invalidations of certain sacramental forms altered under Paul VI (e.g., the 1968 rite of episcopal consecration and 1969 rite of priestly ordination, deemed defective in essential form). The monastery maintains that true Catholics must adhere to pre-Vatican II and , awaiting divine intervention to restore a valid , as no human mechanism exists to depose a reigning —only does so automatically.

Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus and Salvation Exclusivity

The Most Holy Family Monastery adheres to a rigorous interpretation of the Catholic dogma ("Outside the Church there is no salvation"), asserting that formal membership in the —achieved through water , profession of the Catholic , and perseverance in grace—is absolutely necessary for salvation. This position, as articulated by Brother Peter Dimond in his 2004 book Outside the Catholic Church There Is Absolutely No Salvation, rejects notions of salvation via "" or invincible ignorance without actual incorporation into the Church through sacramental . The monastery maintains that the dogma has been infallibly defined at least seven times by ecumenical councils and popes, including the (1442), which stated: "The sacrosanct Roman Church... firmly believes, professes and preaches that none of those existing outside the , not only pagans, but also Jews, heretics and schismatics, can have a share in life eternal; but that they will go into the eternal fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels, unless before the end of life they are added to the Church." In the monastery's view, true Church membership requires adherence to all defined dogmas without exception, rendering post-Vatican II claimants to the papacy and their adherents outside the Church due to alleged heresies like religious liberty and ecumenism. They argue that any attenuation of EENS, such as allowing for salvation of non-Catholics through implicit faith, contradicts papal teachings like Pope Boniface VIII's bull Unam Sanctam (1302), which declares: "We declare, say, define, and pronounce that it is absolutely necessary for the salvation of every human creature to be subject to the Roman Pontiff." The Dimond brothers criticize groups like Catholic Answers for diluting the dogma by promoting "universal salvation possibilities," which they deem heretical. This exclusivity extends to denying salvation for all unbaptized individuals, including infants who die without water baptism, as the monastery upholds the traditional teaching that requires sacramental remission for entry into heaven. They reference historical precedents, such as the excommunication of Fr. (1949) for his strict EENS advocacy, but defend his position against what they call erroneous Holy Office interpretations favoring "." , per MHFM, demands explicit Catholic and obedience, with no exceptions for those knowingly rejecting the Church, emphasizing causal necessity: without the Church as Christ's Mystical Body, union with Christ—and thus salvation—is impossible.

Sacramental Theology

The sacramental theology of Most Holy Family Monastery (MHFM) emphasizes strict adherence to traditional Catholic criteria for validity—proper matter, form, intention, and minister—while rejecting post-Vatican II liturgical reforms as defective and reflective of heretical intent. In their view, the Novus Ordo rites introduce alterations that undermine sacramental integrity, often rendering them invalid or at minimum gravely doubtful, particularly for Confirmation, where the revised form ("receive the seal of the Gift of the Holy Spirit") omits the essential imposition of hands and fails to signify the conferring of the Holy Ghost as in the traditional rite. Similarly, they argue the new Anointing of the Sick employs ambiguous wording focused on physical healing rather than sin remission and permits non-traditional oils, diverging from olive oil specified in prior discipline. For Confession, validity requires the traditional absolution formula ("I absolve you...") by a priest with pre-1969 ordination, as the post-1968 rite of Holy Orders is deemed invalid due to deficient form and intention, producing non-priests incapable of absolving. Central to MHFM's position on Baptism is the absolute necessity of water with Trinitarian form for justification, rejecting or blood as substitutes, which they classify as modernist innovations contradicting patristic sources like St. Gregory Nazianzen and the strict interpretation of councils such as . While conceding that even heretics or non-Catholics can validly baptize if matter (water poured or immersion) and form are correct with intent to perform the Church's act, MHFM recommends conditional baptism ("sub conditione") for converts from or the Novus Ordo sect, citing omitted exorcisms, potential defective intention among ministers adhering to Vatican II errors, and the risk of prior invalid administrations. This stance ties into their broader doctrine, where sacraments outside visible Catholic communion lack salvific efficacy, though emergency baptisms by laypersons remain licit in peril of death. For the Eucharist and other sacraments requiring ordained ministers, MHFM prohibits attendance at "una cum" Masses that include the post-Vatican II claimant to the papacy in the canon, viewing this as illicit communicatio in sacris with manifest heretics and a false profession of unity, though such Masses may retain validity if the traditional rite is used without notorious scandal. Marriage remains valid under natural law consent between baptized persons, but they critique Novus Ordo ceremonies for promoting indifferentism via interfaith allowances and natural family planning over periodic continence. Overall, due to the scarcity of reliable ministers, MHFM advises followers to forgo public Masses and sacraments in many cases, substituting with private Rosary recitation (15 decades daily) and spiritual communions, prioritizing avoidance of heresy over sacramental reception from compromised sources.

Critiques of Modernism and Ecumenism

The Dimond brothers, through publications and videos produced by Most Holy Family Monastery, assert that constitutes the "synthesis of all heresies," as defined by Pope St. Pius X in the 1907 encyclical , which describes it as rooted in , immanentism, and the evolutionary conception of whereby truths adapt to historical contexts rather than remaining immutable divine revelations. They contend that Modernist principles infiltrated Catholic theology prior to Vatican II, as evidenced by ambiguities in mid-20th-century manuals like Msgr. Van Noort's , which they argue compromised the dogma by allowing for outside explicit membership in the visible . In their view, Vatican II fully manifested by promoting a relativistic interpretation of doctrine, such as through declarations implying that non-Catholic sects possess elements of sanctification and truth sufficient for partial communion with the Church, thereby undermining the unique salvific role of Catholicism. Regarding , the brothers denounce the Vatican II Decree on Ecumenism (, promulgated November 21, 1964) as heretical for asserting that separated Christians are brought into through imperfect but real participation in the Church's life, and for claiming that non-Catholics can bear witness to Christ even via martyrdom outside the true faith. They argue this contradicts pre-Vatican II papal condemnations, including Pius XI's Mortalium Animos (1928), which prohibited Catholics from engaging in joint prayer or movements implying doctrinal indifferentism, and they cite 2 John 1:10-11 to prove divine prohibition against receiving heretics into fellowship, let alone endorsing their worship. Specific post-Vatican II actions, such as John Paul II's 1999 Joint Declaration on Justification with Lutherans, are critiqued as Modernist compromises that relativize justification by faith alone versus faith informed by works, echoing condemned Protestant errors while feigning reconciliation without requiring conversion to Catholicism. In e-exchanges and videos, the Dimonds extend these critiques to contemporary figures, labeling practices like interfaith dialogues or recognitions of non-Catholic "saints" and "martyrs" (as in John Paul II's 1995 statement on the "ecumenism of saints") as diabolical deceptions fostering false unity over doctrinal purity. They maintain that true ecumenism demands the "ecumenism of return," wherein heretics submit to papal authority and renounce errors, rejecting Benedict XVI's explicit denial of this approach in 2007 as further evidence of apostasy. These positions frame Modernism and false ecumenism as causal drivers of the Great Apostasy prophesied in Scripture, necessitating total separation from post-Vatican II structures to preserve unaltered Catholic teaching.

Activities and Outreach

Publications, Videos, and Website

Most Holy Family Monastery maintains the website vaticancatholic.com, which serves as its primary platform for disseminating traditional Catholic teachings, particularly sedevacantist critiques of post-Vatican II developments. The site features sections on , spirituality, news links, e-exchanges with inquirers, and a traditional Catholic calendar, positioning itself as a resource for conversion and refutation of perceived heresies in modern Catholicism, , and . It claims to be the highest-ranked traditional Catholic website globally and includes free access to articles, videos, and downloadable materials, with permissions granted for copying and distribution to promote its message. The monastery's publications include self-produced books and articles authored primarily by Brothers Michael and Peter Dimond, focusing on topics such as , objections to , and analyses of papal heresies. Notable titles encompass Outside the Catholic Church There Is Absolutely No Salvation, a detailed defense of strict interpretation of the excluding outside visible Church membership; The Truth about What Really Happened to the after Vatican II, a 658-page volume examining liturgical and doctrinal changes; and UFOs: Demonic Activity and Elaborate Hoaxes Meant to Deceive Mankind, linking extraterrestrial claims to deception. Additional works cover specific critiques, such as , detailing the saint's life and miracles as evidence of Catholic truth, available both in print and online formats. These are offered individually or in bundles, including a $5 package with two books and accompanying videos, through an online store emphasizing low-cost outreach. Videos form a core outreach medium, with hundreds produced and hosted on the monastery's YouTube channel (mhfm1) and endtimes.video subdomain, covering refutations of Vatican II popes, modernism, ecumenism, and contemporary scandals. Content includes scriptural exegeses, historical analyses, and responses to figures like John Paul II or Eastern Orthodox claims, often incorporating Church Fathers' quotes, visual aids, and calls to avoid sin. Many videos are available for free online viewing or as DVDs in packages, with recent examples addressing topics like the Antichrist's identification, priestly possessions, and critiques of Novus Ordo influences. This format enables broad digital dissemination, aligning with the monastery's emphasis on urgent evangelization amid perceived end-times apostasy.

E-exchanges and Public Debates

Most Holy Family Monastery maintains an extensive online archive of e-mail exchanges on its website, vaticancatholic.com, featuring correspondences between brothers Michael and Peter Dimond and various interlocutors, including traditionalist Catholics, Protestant apologists, and self-identified Vatican II adherents. These "E-Exchanges" typically address doctrinal disputes, such as the rejection of baptism of desire in favor of water baptism alone, the heretical nature of Vatican II documents like Nostra Aetate, and the invalidity of the Novus Ordo Mass, with MHFM presenting the exchanges as conclusive refutations supporting their strict interpretation of Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus. Specific examples include debates with individuals like William Witt on Vatican II church validity and Mike Childers on Protestantism, the latter of whom reportedly converted to Catholicism on April 24, 2011, following the correspondence. Opponents in these exchanges often include priests from groups like the SSPX or CMRI, whom MHFM accuses of compromising Catholic dogma by tolerating ambiguity or ecumenism. Beyond e-mail formats, MHFM has engaged in more structured public debates, both written and oral, to defend and related positions. In 2004, the Dimond brothers corresponded with Bishop Joseph McKenna of the CMRI on , arguing that the doctrine contradicts defined Catholic teaching on the necessity of sacramental for ; MHFM published the exchange as evidence of McKenna's error. A 2011 debate transcript records Brother Peter Dimond's confrontation with apologist over #3's affirmation of Quranic Abrahamic descent for , which Dimond contended promotes religious incompatible with prior papal condemnations. MHFM asserts that Sungenis failed to reconcile the text with Catholic exclusivity on truth. Later debates include a February 2011 audio discussion on whether was a heretic, refuting claims by sedevacantist critics that historical papal errors undermine the indefectibility of the Church. Brother Peter Dimond also debated Reformed Protestant Keith Thompson on justification, upholding the Catholic view of against . In a September 20, 2022, public debate hosted online, Dimond opposed Jeff Cassman on the legitimacy of post-Vatican II popes from to Francis, maintaining that their public heresies ipso facto deposed them under and theological principles. MHFM has issued formal debate challenges to figures like Chris Ferrara of The Remnant, critiquing Ferrara's tolerance of doctrinal ambiguity in magisterial texts as contrary to VI's condemnations in Auctorem Fidei. These engagements, often disseminated via videos and transcripts on MHFM platforms, aim to expose perceived inconsistencies in opponents' positions while reinforcing the monastery's theological framework.

Liturgical Practices

The Most Holy Family Monastery adheres to the liturgical forms of the as established prior to Vatican Council, specifically endorsing the codified in the 1570 of Pope St. Pius V while rejecting the 1962 revisions under and the 1969 Novus Ordo Missae, which they deem invalid due to alterations in the consecratory prayers and sacrificial emphasis. This stance aligns with their broader rejection of post-conciliar sacramental rites, including new forms of , which they argue produce invalid priests incapable of confecting the . Lacking ordained clergy—Michael and Peter Dimond operate as lay brothers without valid —the monastery does not celebrate or administer sacraments on-site, focusing instead on private devotional practices and . Adherents are directed to forgo attendance at Masses offered by priests ordained under post-1968 rites, substituting with home-based prayer such as 15 decades of the to satisfy the Sunday precept when no valid Tridentine by a traditionally ordained priest is accessible. Devotional life at the monastery emphasizes traditional piety, including recitation of the Rosary and adherence to a pre-Vatican II Catholic calendar for feasts and fasts, though communal liturgical worship is absent due to clerical scarcity. This approach prioritizes doctrinal purity over frequent sacramental participation, with the brothers promoting the Rosary as a core spiritual exercise amid widespread liturgical invalidity.

Claims of Supernatural Phenomena

Reported Miraculous Events

Most Holy Family Monastery reports a occurring in October 1996 during a Traditional Latin celebrated in their smaller at the Fillmore, New York location. According to the monastery's account, a consecrated host placed in a ciborium after the remained perfectly intact and unchanged over the subsequent decades, without signs of decay or desiccation typically observed in unconsecrated hosts under similar conditions. The monastery interprets this phenomenon as a supernatural sign affirming the validity of their sacraments and the true presence of Christ in the under traditional rites, contrasting it with alleged invalid Eucharistic events in post-Vatican II liturgies. No independent scientific analysis or investigation of the host has been documented or referenced by external sources. In a video released on October 13, 2024, Brothers Michael and Peter Dimond presented footage of the monastery's 90-acre grounds, buildings, and ongoing construction of a larger , while highlighting the preserved host as evidence of divine favor on their community. The brothers assert that underscores God's protection of their sedevacantist position and liturgical practices amid broader .

Theological Interpretation of Experiences

The members of Most Holy Family Monastery (MHFM) interpret reported supernatural phenomena at their facility, including an alleged documented in a video released on , 2024, as providential signs affirming the validity of their traditional Latin Mass and their sedevacantist stance that the papal see has been vacant since the death of in 1958. They maintain that such authentic miracles manifest only where the true Catholic sacraments and doctrines are preserved uncorrupted, serving as empirical validation against the errors of Vatican II and subsequent papal claimants, whom they deem heretics incapable of holding office under . In MHFM's theological framework, these experiences align with biblical and patristic teachings on miracles as corroborations of orthodox faith rather than isolated wonders, echoing St. John Chrysostom's emphasis on supernatural graces attending the pure administration of sacraments like . They reject parallel claims of Eucharistic miracles in Novus Ordo settings as diabolical illusions permitted by God to deceive the masses during the prophesied , citing scriptural warnings against false signs that lead to perdition (e.g., 2 Thessalonians 2:9-11). MHFM further posits that these events fulfill Catholic eschatological prophecies of a faithful remnant enduring trial, where divine interventions distinguish the elect from apostates, reinforcing their doctrine of by implying that adherence to their preserved faith invites such heavenly approbation while compromise invites judgment. This interpretation underscores a causal link between doctrinal fidelity and favor, warning that ignoring such signs perpetuates spiritual ruin amid institutional .

Reception and Controversies

Support Within Sedevacantist and Traditionalist Circles

Support for Most Holy Family Monastery (MHFM) within sedevacantist and traditionalist circles primarily emanates from a niche subset of adherents who align with its rigorous, Feeneyite interpretation of extra ecclesiam nulla salus, which rejects baptism of desire and baptism of blood as means of salvation outside formal membership in the Catholic Church. These supporters view MHFM's positions as a faithful preservation of pre-Vatican II doctrine against dilutions accepted by many other sedevacantist groups, such as the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) or the Society of Saint Pius V. Proponents particularly commend MHFM's extensive output of apologetic videos, books, and e-mail exchanges that systematically critique , , and perceived heresies in post-1958 papal claimants, often citing these materials for their scriptural, patristic, and historical depth in exposing logical inconsistencies. For example, in a 2022 sedevacantism debate, observers noted Brother Peter Dimond's "thorough preparation; anticipation of the opponent's counterpoints; and concise, uncompromising rhetoric" as exemplary. Dedicated online communities and individuals sustain this backing, including the MHFM Supporters Group on , which fosters discussion among those passionate about MHFM's theology and traditional practices. Similarly, sedevacantist accounts on X (formerly Twitter), such as that of Samuel (@unmovediguana), explicitly endorse MHFM while promoting its resources alongside broader traditional Catholic dogmatics. A Facebook page titled "Sunday sermons supporters of MHFM" compiles reflections aligned with the monastery's views, garnering over 390 likes as of recent records. This loyal, if limited, constituency reflects MHFM's appeal to those prioritizing doctrinal absolutism over broader traditionalist consensus, evidenced by sustained donations and website engagement that positioned vaticancatholic.com as the top-ranked site in Alexa.com's "Not in Communion with " category in 2019. Such support contrasts with wider sedevacantist critiques but affirms MHFM's role in reinforcing uncompromising resistance to Vatican II-era changes among committed hardliners.

Criticisms from Other Traditionalist Groups

Other traditionalist Catholics, including sedevacantists, have criticized Most Holy Family Monastery (MHFM) for its rejection of (BOD) and (BOB), positions viewed as aligning with the condemned Feeneyite heresy. Critics argue that MHFM's stance contradicts the Council of Trent's Session 6, Chapter 4, and Session 7, which affirm extraordinary means of justification in cases where water is impeded, as well as papal and theological teachings allowing for BOD in adults under necessity of precept rather than absolute means. Traditionalist writer Steven Speray, in a multi-part refutation, contends that MHFM founders Michael and Peter Dimond misinterpret the "absolute necessity" of baptism by conflating ordinary and extraordinary circumstances, dismissing authoritative sources like the , , and that reconcile BOD with . Sedevacantist outlets have further accused MHFM of doctrinal rigidity that leads to condemning fellow traditionalists as heretics, fostering unnecessary division. For instance, the Dimond brothers' public feuds, such as with sedevacantist apologist Gerry Matatics, resulted in mutual condemnations and lists of "heretics to avoid" that include other independent sedevacantist priests and groups deemed insufficiently strict. This is said to violate Vatican I's emphasis on hierarchical subordination, as MHFM operates a monastery without papal or episcopal oversight in the sedevacantist context, rendering it illegitimate under principles that preclude independent ecclesiastical structures absent a reigning . Additional rebukes highlight MHFM's broader errors, such as attacks on the "no " position held by some , which allows for validity in crisis situations, and their propagation of views that equate disagreement on secondary doctrines like BOD with formal . Sites aligned with , like Betrayed Catholics, label MHFM a "" for these reasons, citing Fr. Leonard Feeney's 1953 by as precedent for rejecting strict interpretations that deny BOD and . Such criticisms portray MHFM as an outlier even among , prioritizing interpretive absolutism over consensus traditional teachings.

Mainstream Catholic Responses

Mainstream Catholic apologists and diocesan authorities have characterized (MHFM) as an unapproved and illegitimate entity, emphasizing its rejection of papal authority since Vatican II as a form of that places it outside the . The monastery's operations in , were never recognized by the Diocese of Camden, where the local bishop did not grant approval for its establishment or activities as a traditionalist . Similarly, , a prominent organization in communion with , has described MHFM as a "fake " run by brothers Peter and Michael Dimond, whom it labels "fake monks" without legitimate religious formation or mandate. Responses from mainstream sources specifically rebut MHFM's sedevacantist arguments, asserting that the position undermines the Church's indefectibility and visibility as taught in documents like from Vatican II and prior magisterial teachings on the papacy. In a 2022 audio rebuttal, apologist dismantled Peter Dimond's defense of , arguing that it leads to an incoherent where no visible head governs the Church, contrary to Christ's promise in Matthew 16:18. A 2016 video analysis by Akin further critiqued the MHFM website for promoting positions that equate to Protestant-like private judgment over the hierarchical Church structure. Broader mainstream Catholic commentary frames MHFM's strict interpretation of —denying salvation to baptized non-Catholics and post-Vatican II adherents—as a distortion of defined , ignoring nuances in papal encyclicals like Pius IX's Singulari Quadam (1854) and later clarifications. These critiques portray MHFM not as a valid witness to tradition but as a fringe group fostering division, with its e-book sales and videos seen as proselytizing against the legitimate rather than preserving . No Vatican-level condemnation specifically targets MHFM, but its aligns with positions repeatedly warned against by popes, such as John Paul II's 1988 address rejecting conclavist and sedeprivationist errors as incompatible with Catholic unity.

Secular and Organizational Designations

Most Holy Family Monastery operates as a not-for-profit incorporated under the laws of the state of New York. Court records from federal litigation, such as Hoyle v. Dimond (2008), explicitly identify it as "Most Holy Family Monastery, a New York Not-for-Profit Corporation," confirming its legal structure for organizational activities including publications and property holdings in Fillmore, New York. In secular classifications, the (SPLC), a left-leaning advocacy organization monitoring , has included Most Holy Family Monastery in its lists of "radical traditional Catholicism" groups since at least 2015, categorizing such entities alongside other ideological watchlists for promoting views the SPLC deems anti-Semitic, anti-LGBTQ, or conspiratorial against post-Vatican II Catholicism. This designation reflects the SPLC's broader framework, which critics from conservative and religious perspectives argue conflates doctrinal traditionalism with hate, often prioritizing ideological alignment over empirical threat assessment, as evidenced by lawsuits and congressional inquiries questioning the SPLC's methodologies. No federal tax-exempt status under IRS Section 501(c)(3) is publicly documented for the organization, distinguishing it from many larger religious nonprofits.

Defenses and Rebuttals by MHFM

Most Holy Family Monastery (MHFM), operated by brothers Michael and Peter Dimond, counters criticisms from other traditionalist Catholics and sedevacantists by publishing extensive theological refutations on their website, emphasizing adherence to pre-Vatican II dogmas such as interpreted strictly to require water and explicit Catholic for salvation. They argue that groups like the (CMRI) and the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) compromise these teachings by accepting (BOD) or invincible ignorance, which MHFM deems heretical dilutions introduced to reconcile with modernist errors. For example, in articles addressing CMRI priests, MHFM acknowledges the validity of their sacraments due to but condemns their doctrinal positions as heretical, citing the Council of Florence's 1442 decree that "pagans, , heretics, and schismatics" cannot achieve eternal life without the Catholic and , interpreted by MHFM as necessitating actual water rather than mere desire. MHFM rebuts accusations from figures like CMRI's Bishop Mark Pivarunas, whom they claim "embarrasses himself" by defending possibilities outside visible , labeling such views as false prophecy influenced by the and inconsistent with papal condemnations of . They extend similar critiques to the SSPV and SSPX, asserting these groups' tolerance of BOD adherents leads to spiritual ruin, as it undermines the absolute necessity of formal incorporation into the Church via , supported by their reading of Trent's Session 6, which they argue does not endorse BOD despite contrary interpretations. In debates and videos, such as against on Vatican II's , MHFM upholds by documenting post-1958 popes' public heresies, like ecumenical events, as automatic loss of office under and theologians like Billuart. Responses to mainstream Catholic outlets, including Catholic Answers, portray critics as deceived by heretics; for instance, MHFM refutes claims of their sedevacantism as extreme by highlighting Vatican II's endorsement of religious liberty, condemned by Pius IX in the 1864 Syllabus of Errors, as evidence of apostasy necessitating the papal see's vacancy since 1958. They defend against charges of Feeneyite novelty—likening their BOD rejection to Fr. Leonard Feeney's 1940s excommunication, later nuanced—by citing patristic sources like St. Gregory Nazianzen's 4th-century rejection of baptism by desire as insufficient and arguing BOD lacks dogmatic definition, emerging as a non-binding theological opinion post-Trent. In addressing personal or group-specific attacks, such as from former associate Eric Hoyle in 2016, MHFM documents his progression from supporter to opponent as an "epic " toward Vatican II acceptance, framing it as demonic influence to undermine their work rather than substantive refutation. They similarly rebut apologists like John Salza and Gerry Matatics for alleged hypocrisy in recognizing post-VII errors while rejecting full sedevacantist implications, insisting no canonical trial is needed for manifest heretics per theologians like Suarez. Through e-exchanges, MHFM responds to individual critics by demanding specific refutations, often highlighting perceived inconsistencies in opponents' appeals to or councils.

References

  1. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Most_Holy_Family_Monastery
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