Saturday, December 9, 2017

Examining Frannie #14: What One Simple Voice Teaches? One Simple Deception

Preface

On March 24th, 2016, I wrote my first blog post concerning New Age Thought in the Diocese of Colorado Springsi. Since that time I have written several more concerning Frannie Rose, Richard Hanifen, Bishop Sheridan, and One Simple Voice. All of the research done in order to create these posts eventually culminated in a letterii written to Bishop Sheridan documenting elements of New Age Spirituality within her teachings drawn from interviews, books, radio programs, Social Media, etc, all relying upon her own words. All of the quotations drawn from these sources were used in their immediate context, remotely within the context of the full body of information as a whole, and comprehensively within the context of Frannie's personal religious influences, her promotion of New Age thinkersiii, her promulgation of New Age thought, and her intent to teach bishops and priests within the Catholic Church without fully understanding Christ and his Church herself.

In response to this letter, Bishop Sheridan claimed that one could not understand the teachings of another person without knowing them face to face and did not offer any evidence that he had read or even took my letter seriouslyiv. Instead of engaging me in conversation about the content of my research he asked me to refrain from speaking against One Simple Voice, which in good conscience I could not do. Unfortunately, the discussion could not continue further since such a notion runs contrary to the academic process such as the same historical evaluation of Jesus Christ communicating to us the revelation of God. Therefore, I made an appeal to written responses that would offer both sides the opportunity to do their research and to present their case in clear and thorough documentation. At this time no attempt has been made by Bishop Sheridan to actively engage our work, rather he simply directed me to speak with members of One Simple Voice. However, in the past members have not been willing to actually engage my research but only spoke from personal experience and attacked me personally. Likewise, Richard Hanifen, member of One Simple Voice, refused to speak with me on the mere basis that we thought differently concerning Frannie Rosev. And I refused to engage him further on the promise to discontinue my analysis of the group, as Bishop Sheridan suggested.

The Bishop's failure to actively engage in our research, given the extent to which we proved the heresies within his diocese, is one of many cases which we see within the Catholic Church today. The Church is truly in crisis, not being true to itself, but rather infiltrated by heresy, liturgical abuses, false ecumenism, and New Age thought. To those who are not fully immersed in the revelation of God may miss the subtle deception involved in “reframing” Catholic teaching in such a way that is contrary to its original context. No longer are people tolerant to inform their intellect of God's revelation they prefer to shape their own thoughts based in personal experience, and no longer are people seeking a properly formed conscience but are rather shaping a morality around their personal opinions. In either case, the effect of Modernism on the Church is still seen in those individuals who claim an experience for themselves to which even the teachings of the Church must bow.

What does One Simple Voice teach?

On March 1st, 2017 the One Simple Voice website contained a new link which attempts to answer the question “What does One Simple Voice teach?”vi. You can read the entire text directly yourself, however, I would exercise a word of caution to do so without viewing the rest of this blog post which includes the text in full. As I will demonstrate throughout this analysis the text does not express key aspects of Christianity which we would hope to see given the critique of Frannie's teachings, such as guilt, sin, or the Triune God. Additionally, I will be able to show how she has repackaged a few of her concepts such as the mind/heart conflict, and the rather ambiguous 'WE' language which she continues to use. It is my desire to show that this most recent attempt of One Simple Voice to explain itself still does not address any of the major concerns which I have personally enumerated within my blog posts, and within my more extensive letter to Bishop Sheridan.

Below I will include Frannie's text from the website in bold and I will give my response below each segment of text. I will be sure to identify both for clarity and will do my best to draw all of our research into understanding the broader context of what is being presented in order to clarify her ambiguity and to sift through any and all equivocation. It is also highly recommended that you read through my blog posts for quotations and explanations of her teachings, especially my letter to the Bishop to better understand the concepts that underline her language. Since I do not intend to repackage this same evidence it is highly important that you are familiar with the concepts and research from which I will draw.

Frannie Rose: For those who are unsure of what we teach, I wish for you to read the following synopsis of our journey to Union with God. This is what happens with many of our students as a personal relationship with Jesus grows deeply and is nurtured through two-way conversation. Their lives change in beautiful ways, the Peace of God is with them, and their experience of church becomes richer as their love for the Eucharist grows deeply. These gifts are what they give to the world, instead of negativity, judgment, fear or angst. In essence, through a personal relationship with God, one is doing their part to help Him create the ultimate peace for humanity.

Response: We first see here that she is not speaking concerning herself on an individual level only but rather speaks of “our journey”, others involved with One Simple Voice. Therefore, while she is indeed claiming to have written this text, she is writing it as a “synopsis” of those who actively teach as part of this group. Therefore, it is possible that she could include aspects of the faith of others without necessarily fully agreeing with it herself.

The term “Union” concerning God certainly has a place within the Christian vernacular, as does some other terms we will see within this text, however, as I have demonstrated given her history with New Age resources and the language that is drawn from New Age perspectives, we can not immediately take the term, or any of these terms, to have the same meaning as within the context of Catholic teaching. I have shown that her view of “union” is one that is consistent with New Age thought, that we are divine, and the original sin is to walk away from this pantheistic understanding. Likewise, when Richard Hanifen, benefactor of One Simple Voice, a once Bishop within the diocese, states that he sees nothing wrong with Panentheism, then we can see all too clear that such a notion of “union” which has been proposed by this group must be seen as suspect.

The language of “two-way conversation”, according to this group, is to “listen to God's voice”, not first and foremost within the Church, and then to weigh any impressions from God, or any other spirit which they may be receiving, but rather are encouraged to place what they have learned from God's revelation contained within the Church aside, and to take what is “said” to them as always being from God, since such a voice, they claim is never judgmental, or critical, but is always peaceful and pleasant, etc. However, the danger of this sort of “two-way conversation” leaves people vulnerable and does in fact encourage personal experience to give shape to their understanding of God's revelation as opposed to testing the spirits to actually see if what they are receiving is from God. Christians know all to well that Satan and fallen angels wander throughout the world seeking the ruin of souls and countless documented cases of demonic activity that is often characterized as “peaceful” or filled with “joy”, as is a common experience within the New Age deception. My personal experience of the Holy Spirit's conviction of my sins and the resulting guilt are in accordance with God's revelation of himself in Scripture, so even though I may find impressions from God to be unpleasant or in witnessing God bringing rebuke, blindness, or even death upon men in Scripture, we understand it to be God despite how we might perceive or feel about it.

Most of this portion of text speaks of the “students” of One Simple Voice, and no doubt many of those are self-proclaimed Catholics, which is why Frannie speaks of “them” and “their”. In general, this idea of peace, although one of the aspects of Christianity, both having peace within, such that we have faith in God, and we hope for the resurrection as well as the restoration of all things subsequent to all the elements being burned by fire, and the peace we are to strive to have with one another, as far as we can, but Scripture does not paint us a picture of a future utopia of peace and harmony, like that described as the Age of Aquarius, and like what you can often hear in the words of Frannie Rose. To the contrary, Scripture reveals to us, God has told us plainly, that wickedness would grow, and that Christ came not to bring peace but a sword, and we would see a greater divide between the wicked and the righteous, and each would increase, and grow in greater conflict with one another.

Frannie Rose: The mystical life is one in which one lives in union with God. It is a life lived as “WE”—God and me—instead of “me.” It is a life of wonder, God’s Peace, and God’s Love at the center of everything one lives and chooses... Living as “WE,” one finds freedom, a sense of great hope, and a sense of great possibility. Living as “WE,” all things are possible. Living as “WE,” one is protected by God from evil. Listening to God speak each day, through our challenges, helps us to rise above anger, hurt, and resentment to forgiveness, compassion, and peace in Him—in essence, bringing peace to the world. From this place of unity in Him, the world looks different and can only be explained in words as seeing with the eyes of a child... Life becomes life lived forever as “WE”—in His presence, in His purpose, and with His meaning. God is truth and love, and living as “WE,” our lives can be lived from this place.

Response: Here we see this language of “WE”, and each time you see it you must understand it as she described it in her book, as the “true self”. You will have to review my work on this subject as it relates both to Frannie, and also to heretics within the Church such as Fr. Keating. But for now, understand it to mean that while we are part of God, we are not God. It is to say that in the center of us is a part of divinity, not in the sense of “Jesus dwelling within our hearts” but in a sense that we are ontologically a part of God, this is the divine self as taught in the New Age, and is contrary to the Creator – Creature distinction that is at the core of our understanding of who God is and how we relate to him. It is the notion that God is all that there is, and even more, and beyond the material world.

Also we will find a lot of truisms in her text, such that one “finds freedom”, etc but the precise relationship between who God is and how we relate to Him has never been explicitly described in accordance with Catholic teachings by Frannie Rose. If you have read through my blog posts and my letter to the Bishop I drew together many quotations from her describing her view, a view which is taken directly from her New Age influences. And of course this would be the case since she presumed to teach bishops and priests when her view of God was heretical, and contrary to Catholic teaching. For if she was truly teaching an experience with God that is in accordance with the revelation which God himself has given then no one within the diocese would have questioned her teachings, but since those who are fully immersed in God's self-disclosure, and know very well how to discern aberrations, and identify subtle heretical notions, we have spoken as we should, both in accordance with our conscience and based in the call which God himself has placed upon our hearts to teach and to defend the true Christian experience of God rooted in precisely how he has revealed himself to us.

Frannie Rose: One sees Jesus as God’s Only Begotten Son, our teacher of this mystical journey; the gifts of His sacrifice teach us how God wishes us to be. If one follows The Way, it leads to eventual surrender to His words and a letting go of the life we chose. We are resurrected into the life He chooses for us. This process is one of transformation through the heart transcending our mind’s will to instead follow His will for us... It is the truth of Jesus and His teachings that sets us free while we give His love to the world. Through our being His peace, we have seen His peace in others. This is how His message is conveyed best. This is the “new evangelization.” We have seen this through our ministry, One Simple Voice.

Response: “One sees Jesus”... of all the ways in which one can express their belief in God Incarnate, she uses the generic “one”. As I mentioned before many of her students are Catholics, and perhaps some of them still maintain that Jesus is “God's Only Begotten Son”. It is not clear exactly what is meant by this phase, however, since the phrase “God's Only Begotten Son” is used in all “Christian” cults and heretical groups, but of course will carry a meaning contrary to that of true Christianity.

I would like to believe that she has changed and developed throughout the last year or two and have become “more Catholic” as a result of her being involved with the Catholic Church. I would like to believe that she has come to accept that God is Triune and that God the Son became incarnate and dwelt among us. And that in this Word, God has indeed spoken everything he wishes to say to us. I would like to believe that she maintains that the revelation in Christ is more than just one faith among others in a piece of pie as she once described. I would really like to think that what one believes does make a difference and that doctrine is important but yet she has told us plainly it isn't about what you believe but the faith itself that is important and that doctrine does not really matter. For her she sees the Church which Christ established as something that can be enriched by something outside of itself and only when we put it aside. But sadly, we have seen her quote Jesus before, as we would see any New Age teacher appeal to Jesus, but the “truth of Jesus and His teachings” are not conveyed in accordance with Catholic teaching, but rather Christ's language is used to smuggle in New Age concepts which are inherently contrary to his original intent. Above all, if she has indeed changed any of her teachings it would be prudent in the light of our concerns to speak plainly and comprehensively in order that we may know that she now rejects some of her previous teachings and that she know understands some of her ideas to be wrong.

The gifts of His sacrifice”... As I mentioned before, I am not surprised that certain concepts relating to our salvation and Christ as our Savior is omitted from this text. The central concept in our spiritual journey as Catholics is Christ's bloody sacrifice upon the cross! This is a dominant Catholic teachings... that God became incarnate and died a most horrific death, shedding his blood for the forgiveness of our sins, so that we may be freed from both the guilt and the sin that so deeply pervades our heart. We look to the blood of Christ to cleanse us from all sin and so our spiritual journey becomes one of purgation, both in the here and now, and also in purgatory, as we are sanctified in order to stand in the presence of God without stain or blemish. And consequently the resurrection from the dead, of which Christ is the first fruits, by which we too will be raised to new life.

In fact, according to Catholic teaching the whole of our spiritual journey is expressed according to the Incarnation, that God the Son, the second person of the Truine God became a human being, the Crucifixion, that a blood sacrifice was required for the atonement of our sins to free us from the guilt and deceitfulness of our hearts, and the Resurrection, that we too will be brought to newness of life both now through the sanctification of our whole being and in our glorification where by we come to behold the Beatific Vision!

Twice in this text Frannie uses the word 'mind' and as we would expect, it is always expressed according to the erroneous notion of this mind/heart conflict that is key in the New Age. In the first instance she says “...the heart transcending our mind’s will to instead follow His will for us.” In this first case she is making an identification between the mind and the self will that we often exercise in defiance to the will of God. This could not be farther from the truth. While self will, pride, and arrogance, are indeed acts of defiance to the expressed will of God, this is not to be directly associated with the mind as to identify it as “the mind's will”. Later she will say “...we transcend the mind's problems by celebrating the truth of Jesus...”. Once again it is the 'mind' that has the problems.

The heart is the seat of the intellect. We can see this clearly when Mary upon receiving word from the angelic messenger “Mary treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart.”vii We understand that the thoughts of men flow from the condition of their hearts as well as external influences such as ideas and impressions that come to their mind. It is the mind, in relation to externals, that serves at the gateway to our inner most being, and it is in the deepest parts of ourselves that we reflect upon that which we have stored within our hearts. Scripture continually directs us to think and meditate upon his Word, and this we shall do with all our heart, mind, soul, and strength. Contrary to Frannie's pure and perfect heart concept, the true self, in Catholic thought it is the heart that is deceitful above all else and it is from the overflow of the heart that the mouth speaks. “For it is from within, from the human heart, that evil intentions come: fornication, theft, murder, adultery, avarice, wickedness, deceit, licentiousness, envy, slander, pride, folly.”viii Yet, sometimes when the truth is presented to us, when the revelation of God is made known to us, as an external, it may remain as a notion still if it does not work down into the heart as it should.

Frannie Rose: The Eucharist is our most sacred way to celebrate this Union. The wonder of this celebration expresses in a present moment the beauty of this union in us. Each Mass we attend is a way to honor and solidify this union as history and the present moment are brought together. With God, we transcend the mind’s problems by celebrating the truth of Jesus and His wish for us to remember He is always within us.

Response: The language of “Union” within the context of Frannie's teachings is extremely suspect. According to Frannie, what she sees as union is something that we are in our true self, a part of God, and it is something we are born to but then we moved away from it. It is very important to read what she has said on this topic to understand the force of this point. Not only that but notice that what she says concerning the Eucharist and the Mass lead back to this “union”, and her focus is on the “celebration” of something already there, and is “always within us”.

First, the Eucharist is a true participation in the body, blood, soul, and divinity of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ where by He is made present in the elements via transubstantiation and is therefore present in a manner that he is not present anywhere else, not even in our hearts.  This is why we come to the Eucharist as opposed to merely turning in on oneself. It is this real presence of Christ in the Eucharist that is the most unique presence of Christ which is outside of ourselves to which we come seeking grace and mercy, both for the forgiveness of our sins and the strengthening to better practice virtue. We come to the Eucharist as something outside of ourselves seeking what we do not have as the God appointed means by which we are to receive him fresh and anew. This is not to say that we do not have a present relationship with Christ, nor that we have experienced no change in our sinful hearts, but it is indeed more.

Second, in Catholic mysticism, the idea of union is contrary to how it has been presented by Frannie Rose. The unitive way, as it is often described by saints is seen as the third stage of our spiritual journey which comes after one has spent many, many years in their struggle against sin in their hearts, and many more years in the practice of virtue, prayer, and good works. It is only after this very long, and for most people longer than they will be alive, does one begin in the unitive way. And even then this union is described as something that grows and develops, not something that is already there and part of ourselves. In fact the Catholic idea of union is rooted in the idea of a spiritual marriage, and such a betrothal to God is that between a purely created being and the Creator of everything else from nothing, from which we are, and to which we would go if God did not sustain it by his Word, our Lord and Savor Jesus Christ.

Frannie Rose: The Scriptures are not only read, but they are felt by all who live this life as one with Jesus and His teachings. That is not to say we think we “are Jesus,” as we are clearly human, but this Union sculpts us and sands each of us into the being God wishes us to be. The meaning and the purpose of His words become part of us. A deep-rooted and richer understanding is uncovered in the scriptures as we continue to live with God at the center of our lives.

Response: According to Frannie Rose, the Scriptures, together with Buddhist texts, contain the same basic message. Given this perspective, not truly understanding the differences between these two diametrically opposed worldviews, she would appeal to Scripture in this manner and within this general interpretive lens, and therefore will not understand them rightly.

I find it curious why clarification concerning us not being “Jesus” is mentioned instead of communicating to us plainly that we are not divine in any way whatsoever as she elsewhere intimates that God and me, this WE, is the True Self. Jesus was indeed fully human, just as we are, but he was also fully God, in a manner no one else is. She then curiously says “...but this Union”, as to employ what usually serves as having a negating principle. It is therefore not clear exactly what is being affirmed and what is being negated since she fails to explicitly define exactly what she means by 'union'. But again if she were to define it in this text as she has elsewhere, it would be yet another clear admission to heresy.

Frannie Rose: As you know, mystical people through the centuries have suffered many hardships carrying the cross, conflicting with those who do not understand this Unity and its experience. Unable to understand from words this state of Union, they label it only by the things they know of or have read about – this divisiveness manifests from one who has not found this Unity within himself.

Response: It should first be noted that when she says 'mystical people' she did not say specifically Catholic saints, nor did she identify “those who do not understand” to be the Church. First and foremost mystical people did not suffer at the hands of the Church because the Church persecuted them for their relationship with Christ, rather they were often given their own religious order after evaluating that they are in fact orthodox and in accordance to the teachings of the Church. The real conflict which they often suffered was the corruption in the Church such as heresy, sinfulness, cowardice bishops, and priests abusing their power, etc, not unlike what we are witnessing with this liberal, modern, New Age infiltration.

Frannie's view of “Unity” has been shown to be heretical. It isn't a matter of being persecuted, its a matter of believing something to be contrary to what God has told us about Himself. As I have said before, if Frannie's teaching were in accordance with “things they know of or have read about”, that is everything which God has revealed to us, then we certainly would have no issues with it.

First, the revelation of God which he has given unto us through Scripture, Tradition, and the Magisterium, is exactly what we know of and have read about. Therefore, we know that when we have experiences we have guidance and a religious context with which to interpret and sift through the encounter. And it is through this method, of true spiritual direction, that we come to understand our experiences and be able to better discern whether the spiritual influence is of God or if it is from somewhere else, either ourselves, others, or the demonic. As I explained with my assessment of Bonaventure's work, The Journey of the Mind into God, the first six parts of the seven part work is devoted to meditations upon the revelation of God concerning Himself, reflections upon nature, our relationships, and the dynamics between the various powers of our soul, and it is only after this and within this context that one will have a true and authentic experience of God.

Second, Christianity is a real faith, one in which we encounter a real God, so it is obviously fitting that there is a reality to that which we read in the pages of Scripture. However, not just any experience is healthy or even from God. We certainly should have experiences of God but they must be within the context of what he has already revealed and established for our spiritual good. Frannie's suggestion that we set “what we know” aside in our experiences is the complete opposite of what we are told to do by God himself! She claims that when we “take back” the things that we knew they would be “richer”. However, it is not necessary to eliminate the mind from this equation, in fact it is exceedingly dangerous.

Third, one of the New Age mind conditioning techniques is to do this very thing. Experiences are very subjective and when the mind is not actively engaged in evaluating them in the light of God's revelation then we are also extremely susceptible to suggestion and influence. In fact, experiences are often very powerful and emotional and usually can have a great swaying power of allegiance to different ideas. This is the true art of manipulation because within these experiences one can often pick up erroneous notions and then when they start to think upon those things that they left out of the situation and begin to think of them differently. While we certainly should have a real and authentic back and forth with the various sources of theology, one of which being the personal experiences of Christians, we are very careful to weigh them very carefully and to be extremely cautious not to allow them to introduce foreign ideas. Many, many cults have formed within the United States centered around Christianity because a person took an impression or “voice from God” and came back to Scripture and formulated an entirely different system of thought, reframing concepts and giving new meanings to biblical terms.

Fourth, Frannie continues to characterize Catholics who clearly see this heretical view of “Union” for what it is as if they are ignorant people who don't understand. Frannie wants you to believe that she has had this esoteric experience that can not be defined by words, either by analogy, approximation, negation, affirmation, etc... the only way that any human being comes to understand anything at all! We don't question whether she has had an experience, for many, many people have different kinds of experiences that change their life from all walks of life and in the context of many different religious systems. We object to the New Age context with which she has had these experiences, and seriously question her motivation to be involved within the Catholic Church since she has said plainly that God wants her to teach the bishops, priests, and nuns, the very thing that people do who have strong spiritual experiences within the context of dabbling in New Age Spirituality. And there is no real surprise that she has and will continue to have a certain measure of success among the clergy because most of them are not train in the manner in which they used to before Vatican II, and those that have too often have watered down their faith to such an extent that liberalism and modernism become the main fixture of their teachings.

Frannie Rose: We would be happy to answer any questions you may have or to hear of your experiences. The journey of Jesus and his teachings proclaims the “good news,” and we share that good news. With a personal relationship with Jesus, the world can become this good news, if all begin to live His message.

Response: Yes! Please! Answer our questions! This is what we have been asking for over a year! Instead of receiving clear answers we have received personal attacks from her studentsix, a formal refusal to speak to usx, and political maneuvering designed to protect her and Richard Hanifen. In fact the only response I have ever received from Frannie has been a short message on my facebook page for The Catholic Wesleyan, in which she attacks our faith and implies our ignorancexi. All of these things have been documented, every contact, every written word.

And I pray that we not only receive answers which they claim to give freely, but also justice for the spiritual anguish that many have received as a result of this continuing deception, this One Simple Deception. Our hearts bleed for all involved and our sole desire is for heresy to be seen for what it is and to be treated as such, as is the most fitting response of the Catholic faithful.

vii Luke 2:19
viii Mark 7:21-22

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Examining Frannie #13: An Appeal to Frannie Rose

Message from Frannie Rose

Dear Corey

Recently I noticed on my facebook page that you had been trying to contact me for some time. I wasn’t aware your message was there until today, because you are not listed as one of my facebook friends. Your letter mentioned that you wanted to me to contact you.

Your postings were brought to my attention last year and I found them judgmental and unkind. Theologians use theology to help to support understanding, not as a weapon. Your postings were immediately accusatory and I felt bullied by someone whom has no understanding of my intention or what I speak.

There are many items you discussed with the premise that I am guilty until proven innocent. Your stories about what I have spoken and written are incorrect. Much of what you perceived were assumptions and perceptions based entirely upon your own premise that I am new age. Given your worldview lens, you saw what you wanted to see because you have no understanding of the concepts I was discussing.

To add to your misconceptions, on the youtube that you analyzed, behind me was always a screen with a quote from a Christian mystic that I was discussing. You did not see the screen or the quote because it was not seen on the video. You would have had to be present at the retreat to see it. However you commented on what I said, labeling it heresy. On one of those quotes you wrote a whole paragraph, which was a quote by Teresa of Avila – “Teach me dear God, all that you know." You lashed out into a whole tirade about this.

It saddens me as a new Catholic to experience first hand your lack of faith, your lack of kindness, and compassion and by your assumption that I am evil because you have not experienced what I have. I invite you to look more deeply into yourself to find these things. For surely your unkind and judgmental way of being has become slanderous and despotic and serves no humane purpose.

Perhaps God will help you to understand that when you approach human beings with kindness, compassion and love, you receive these things as well as their cooperation.

I will pray for this.

In His peace,
Frannie Rose

My Response to Frannie Rose

Frannie Rose,

I think that given the time and effort that people have put forth in order to express their concerns it may be prudent for you to actually address the following letter which I have written to the bishop recently. Since it is thorough and well-documented I will not reproduce points from it here for the sake brevity. http://thecatholicwesleyan.blogspot.com/2017/03/

I think that people would be more interested in a detailed response to our concerns instead of simply stating that we are misunderstanding you, or simply stating that your teachings are orthodox, or that you think that our concerns have been expressed in a judgmental or unkind manner, or whether you think we have a strong Catholic faith, or whether you think we share the same religious experiences. Therefore, we eagerly anticipate your thorough, detailed, and well-documented responses to each of our points and evidences which we have put forth.

To be sure, I have not made mere assumptions concerning your teachings since all of my writings have been based in a detailed analysis of what you have taught and written and it is on this documented basis that I have determined that your teachings are incompatible with the Catholic Faith.

Quoting a Christian Mystic in reference to your teachings does not mean that your teachings are compatible with what that mystic was saying in the broader perspective of their Catholic faith. It is very easy to misunderstand the mystics particularly because there are “catholic” materials that are published and influence a great number of Catholics, especially writings from dissenters such as Richard Rohr and Thomas Keating. Dissent and liberalism within the Catholic Church is alive and well, and many of these would lead you to believe that the writings of Eckhart Tolle are compatible with Catholic thought, etc. But there are those that work diligently to make sure that Catholics understand the true Catholic faith and not other versions of it proposed by dissent. Our concern is expressed as clearly as the distinction between the Catholic faith and a dissenting amalgamation of some Catholic concepts with New Age elements. See the following on Thomas Keating as an example of dissent: http://www.spiritualdirection.com/2015/09/28/can-i-trust-father-thomas-keating

I truly believe that you have found this dissenting niche in 'Catholic' thought and have had this reinforced by others, even priests, nuns, and bishops. Richard Hanifen himself has stated that he sees no problem with Panenthiesm even though it contradicts the teachings of Ecumenical Councils. Because of this I do not blame nor accuse you of deliberate deception but since we have repeatedly detailed our concerns publicly with no serious response we have questioned just how genuine this is.

We eagerly await your detailed response to our concerns laid out in our letter to Bishop Sheridan.


Corey Chambers

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Examining Frannie #12: Rebuttal to Bishop Sheridan's Response

The Bishop's Response

Dear Mr. Chambers,

This email is in response to your latest communication in which you ask me to take action against the members of One Simple Voice.

May I first request that you discontinue your condemnation of One Simple Voice and their work. Since you have not met with any of the members or attended any of the retreats, it seems inappropriate to judge not only their words, but also their moral character and their canonical status.

Upon assurance that you will discontinue such efforts to publicly discredit those involved with One Simple Voice, I would invite you to visit with them in person to voice your concerns and enter into a dialogue with them.

Bishop Hanifen informs me that he discontinued efforts to dialogue, but would take part in this effort, should you choose to accept the invitation.

I will await you response in the hope that this meeting can take place.

In Christ,

Bishop Michael Sheridan

My Rebuttal

Your Excellency,

First and foremost, you have never given any indication that you have read nor understood my research. Do you not recognize her worldview from what she has written and taught publicly in seminars and interviews which I have documented for you? Do you deny the clear demonstration of it? How could you, a bishop, supposedly learned in theology possibly fail to see the reason and force of argument through clear and thorough documentation? I would be willing to write to you individually if you are interested in actually engaging my letter to you line by line.

Second, with all due respect, I can not and will not in good conscience discontinue my condemnation of the teachings of Frannie Rose, for my conscience is bound first and foremost to the scriptures and to the tradition of our Church without alteration or adulteration.

I have definitively proven through documentation that her teachings are rooted in her earlier religious experiences which she has not publicly rejected but rather speaks as if there is a continuity between all of what she teaches. I have demonstrated from her own words and writings in a manner that is incontrovertible, and any claim to the contrary is incompatible with reason. No attempt at clarification or defense has been presented that has satisfied our concerns.

Third, it is the role of theologians to constantly examine the writings and teachings of others and it has never been inappropriate to scrutinize writings and to examine teachings in a person's own words without knowing the person firsthand, otherwise we could not practically examine the propositions of others whether in history or in our day. This is the academic process and does not require knowing Frannie Rose or Richard Hanifen personally, for neither has it ever been required of scholars to personally know any figure in history, nor for a professor to critique and write rebuttals against a book from one of his contemporaries. You are gravely mistaken to think otherwise. Teachings are propositions which contain statements which are properly defined and either contain truth or falsehood, and if her teachings are but propositions that contain falsity as I have proven beyond all doubt, then there only remains for her to recant.

Fourth, my letter to you is and remains available to the public as will your responses to me concerning it, or lack of response. I have made previous and public efforts to seek clarification from Frannie Rose herself but Hanifen decided that he did not want to engage me in conversation on the curious basis that since we think differently concerning Frannie Rose then we would not be able to benefit from further dialogue. Has Hanifen admitted that this premise to avoid conversation is mistaken? He is more than free to engage in my writings which he has never done. At this point, the force of documentation can not be overturned by rhetoric nor dismissed for any reason. My work remains as the definitive proof of her worldview which you have yet to take as seriously as you should.

This is a matter that is not easily solved by attempts to get along or a simple matter of getting to know the feelings of individuals involved. There is nothing to be gained at this point beyond Frannie's public admission that she has taught heresy, and if she has now changed what she believes or teaches differently than she has then she should make this very plain to all of us that she recants what she has taught in the lectures and interviews we have seen, and rejects her own book the Invitation which contains many errors and teaches contrariety to the Catholic faith.

Fifth, I am very, very sorry if you have been taken in by this latest deception contained on the One Simple Voice website, attempts to try and couch her heresies within language that sounds more Catholic. If she is a Catholic now, as she claims to be, she must admit her previous errors, speak of God as distinct and infinitely so, that we are not part of him in any sense of the word, that our hearts of sinful and that Christ's sacrifice was about the cleansing of sin by his blood, etc. All she has done in her latest writings on her website is to choose her words more wisely and couch them in a few more words that are distinctively Catholic while all along imbuing them with a sense that is not Catholic, but is rather consistent with her New Age beliefs.

Could it be true that others around her who are liberals and dissenters are feeding her poor affirmations to the point that she truly believes that her new age teaching is compatible with the Christian revelation? Even if this was the case, we have proven the distinction and therefore she can not possibly be ignorant in this matter

Sixth, Richard Hanifen only wants an audience with me, John Morrison, or any one else simply to try and convince us that Frannie's New Age teaches are orthodox and we continue to be unconvinced by the rhetoric nor interested in attempts to justify her heresies to us. All dialogue in this matter is best served by an academic process that is thorough and is detail oriented, while documenting our sources, as we have done on countless occasions.

Corey Chambers


Friday, March 31, 2017

Examining Frannie #11: Letter to Bishop Michael Sheridan


March 31, 2017


Bishop Michael Sheridan
Diocese of Colorado Springs
228 N. Cascade Ave
Colorado Springs, CO 80903

Re: Frannie Rose
One Simple Voice


Your Excellency:

I. Personal Note

Since our last correspondence it has heavily weighed upon me that the manner of my discourse with you personally as well as the manner of my presentation throughout my research had been less than ideal and may have served as a hindrance to the very purpose for which I set out to accomplish. For this I deeply apologize and ask for your patience in this matter and ask that you allow the truth of what I wish to convey to win over any manner in which it is presented.

My desire for the last few years has been to study and present the teachings of Frannie Rose in her own words so that there would be no confusion concerning its meaning. And often this has created impassioned moments of ill-temper, impatience, and arrogance. My intent, however, was and continues to be the catechesis of Catholics about the dangers of New Age Spirituality and its most recent expression through the teachings of Frannie Rose. Many, many hours has been poured into this project in the evaluation of her teachings for the purpose of presenting it to you in her own words, a task which has not been simple nor expedient to say the least.

When I first announced that I would be reviewing and explaining the teachings of Frannie Rose I received immediate opposition from some of her students. This initial response revealed to me just how pervasive her teachings had become within the area. When I engaged each and every one of them not one of them spoke from a factual basis but rather spoke of their relationship to Frannie Rose and spoke of their personal experiences. I was personally attacked and was not able to reason with any of them because none of them were willing to evaluate what I had documented.1

I care very much for the revelation of Christ and His Church, and I take personal issue with those who attempt to lead people away from that fullness and into the incredible dangers that exist and I myself have experienced. When some of the Catholic faithful in the Diocese of Colorado Springs first explained their frustrations to me I did not put too much thought into it, but as the problem persisted I felt a personal call to unravel the teachings of Frannie and to explain to others in no uncertain terms that she is not presenting the gospel of Jesus Christ, nor is she presenting a Christian form of prayer, nor is she echoing the voice of the saints in own day, nor is what she teaches couched in the theology of the Church, rather, what and how she teaches is directly influenced by and firmly based upon basic fundamental philosophical assumptions which are in stark opposition to the Christian revelation.

II. Historical Background

A. Religious Formation and Influence

Prior to Frannie's entrance into the Catholic Church her religious formation came primarily through New Age teachers such as Deepak Chopra,2 3 Eckhart Tolle,4 James Redfield,5 and Gary Zukav6. She did not enter the Catholic Church in order to be in full communion, that is to be fully convinced of the dogmas of the Catholic Church as revealed by God. Rather, she claims that a spirit, which refers to itself as 'I Am', directed her to Buddhist and Sufi texts and she came to conclude that they contained the same essential teachings as Scripture, though she was admittedly partial to Buddhist writings. She entered the Church in order to promulgate New Age Spirituality under the guidance of this spirit who came to her, which she now identifies with her True Self, the voice of her heart. She was not drawn to the Church by its truth, rather she was told to go to the Catholic Church in order to draw it into this spirit's teachings.

To the contrary, Scripture tells us not to “believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God...”7 We are also told that “The Spirit clearly says that in later times some will abandon the faith and follow deceiving spirits and things taught by demons.”8 Scripture also tells us that “every spirit that acknowledges that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is from God, but every spirit that does not acknowledge Jesus is not from God. This is the spirit of the antichrist...”9 The spirit which she listens to is the foundation of her religious experiences, and it is this same spirit who wants to use her to infiltrate the Catholic Church.

B. The Present New Age Infiltration

The spirit that influenced her did not lead her to the unique and exclusive incarnation of God in the person of Jesus Christ, nor did it draw her into the Catholic Church by the fullness of truth.

To the contrary, this spirit has told her: “I am pulling the nuns. And with My word, one day the priests, too, will feel pulled. Slowly their faith will become less covered by structure and will be the breath of essence as which it began – a circle. War based upon dogma will end.... we shall begin with the Catholic Church, as its structure is heavy, and eyes fall upon it. Once its clergy hears My voice, I will give them instructions for My way to peace.”10 Earlier in her book, The Invitation, this spirit defines structure as “Churches, temples, and religious traditions...”11 This spirit also says that “many priests are lost in old conditioning and thick structure.”12 Frannie teaches that we need to question what the Church has taught us and to abandon the dogmas of the Church, particularly the teaching that God is distinct, and to listen to this spirit that has been influencing her.

Likewise this spirit spoke concerning the liturgy that “I am not in the space that is filled with another's words... hearing another's words fills up one's mind... I am elusive to your mind.”13 Frannie therefore teaches and speaks of the liturgy as a “program filled with words to say and repeat” and that this is “the structure that is seen in religious practices today.” “From the moment one enters a church or a sanctuary, the program is written for him.”14

To the contrary, the liturgy on earth reflects the on-going heavenly liturgy of the saints as depicted in the book of Revelation. God is present to us through Word and Sacrament, and permeates the entire Mass with his presence with those same words which he has given unto us. Any work of the Holy Spirit will be in conformity with what God has already revealed to us and which we already live out by the fullness of truth in the Catholic Church. This is why this spirit wants to work within the silence of one's mind apart from the scripture-saturated mass.

There is a clear demarcation between those who merely live the form of religion without a vibrant faith in Christ, and the idea that all religious traditions, including the dogmas of the Catholic Church, need to be abandoned so that a spirit can lead us into Panentheism. There is also a clear distinction between gaining a deeper understanding of the revelation of Christ, and the idea that New Age Spirituality can enhance or enrich the teachings of the Catholic Church through listening to a spirit that works in and through Frannie Rose, and those she attempts to influence.

This spirit did not lead her to the Catholic Church to embrace its fullness or to accept Christ as the incarnation of God, she was being led to the Church to undermine its dogmas, which is precisely what spirits attempt to do through the New Age movement and their infiltration of the Church. The only way for “the war upon dogma” to end is to eliminate the dogmas of the Church, this would be to remove the 'structure that weighs down the heart', which she claims to be part of God, and in acknowledging this is how peace is brought about in the world.15 She would have us to believe that this “war upon dogma”, that is the contrary teachings in different world religions one from another, will end when we all recognize that each of our respective religions are mere vehicles to this same Panentheistic God, and through this God-consciousness we will have peace and harmony. This is the core doctrine of New Age Spirituality.

Near the end of her book she states that “This is not about religion, structure, a specific dogma, or words to follow. Each religion is only a vehicle to God...”16 “A religion is just a vehicle and to get it right is not the point, to find God is."17 To find God according to Frannie Rose means to obtain God-consciousness, that is to realize that you are God in your True Self, and no matter what path one takes to get there she claims that this is what is found in the center, God. This is precisely New Age teaching. Although Christianity may assist in higher levels of consciousness, as used and interpreted within the paradigm of New Age Spirituality, but essentially it is an obstacle to the highest state of consciousness, the realization that God and man is not distinct.

To the contrary, finding God through the incarnation of God the Son, the second person of the Holy Trinity, through the inspired text, and through the Church, which is the sacrament of salvation, is the right, true, proper, and normative means which has been given unto us by God to find Him. That there are small rays of truth mixed with error in other world religions, and that God may at times work in the lives of people exactly where they are at does not negate the fullness of the Catholic Church, nor God's desire that we be led deeper into that fullness, that is, to come to know and understand who it is who has so graciously saved us through the blood of Jesus Christ. “Now this is eternal life: that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent.”18

C. Dangers of the New Age Paradigm

According to Frannie all exclusive claims to truth are a product of the egoic mind, a structure of the false self, the mind prison that has been built through conditioning by religion and what we have been told by the Church. The New Age infiltrates all religions by first claiming that they all lead to God, which they define according to Panentheism, the True Self, and then condition them further to see their religion as a mere vehicle to New Age Spirituality. The result is that the religious paradigm shifts, and the New Age concept of God usurps previously held beliefs, which are now discarded in as much as those teachings conflict with what they have now found within the New Age. In the end, the person comes to accept all the tenants of New Age Spirituality, to a greater or lesser degree, and will perceive anything contrary to it as a product of the egoic mind – a structure and conditioning known as the false self.

Often people who have been drawn into the New Age Movement retain their membership to whichever religion they previously preferred in order to spread New Age teachings further, and will at times encourage people in it as long as they adopt New Age ideas. It is a slow, subtle, and deceptive process of syncretism19, a blurring of distinctions, until ultimately the previously held positions are either absorbed, subsumed, or abandoned according to the New Age paradigm.

D. New Age Mind-Conditioning Technique

Frannie continues to dismiss the Church which Christ established with divine authority and which the saints have defended with their blood. Frannie teaches that we are to empty our mind of revelation and simply listen to this spirit about who God is. “We miss seeing God because we think we know about him... we have been told in Church...”20 “...today we don't know anything about God, we are going to let God tell us about him, or her...”21

Frannie leads people away from the scriptural teaching of testing the spirits by the revelation of Christ and the teaching of the Church. “Even when people begin to hear God's voice the first thing they do is they question whether or not its God, because they allow their mind to analyze what their hearing, if they let go of the analyzing of what their hearing and allow their hearts to come into the situation, they know its God.”22 During an interview on the Rocky Mountain Views, the host asked Frannie: “How do you know you are talking to God, how do you know you are not talking to the devil?” To which Frannie simply said: “...somehow in your heart you know it is right.”23 She has also stated: “...minds don't pretend, but if you are really hearing the voice of God, God speaks in gentle, kind, and loving ways and our minds don't do that, our minds are critical, they speak negatively, they look for what's wrong in a situation... the mind is always looking for the imperfection...”24

When she was asked if there was reincarnation she responded by choosing not to answer, but rather said that we should be asking God these questions, and then listen to what his answer is.25

To the contrary, the New Age uses mind conditioning techniques such as emptying the mind, or creating space through unlearning, in order to circumvent the discernment process which God told us to use in order to recognize if a spirit is from God or not, that is, to test it against the revelation of Christ and the teaching of his apostles through the Catholic Church. It is a common experience within the New Age to receive spirits that are accompanied by feelings of gentleness, kindness, and contain words which are spoken in loving ways. There are many, many documented cases of people who have experienced peace and tranquility when encountered by a spirit through the New Age. Additionally, Frannie continues to cast the mind in a negative light, which is another tactic to lead people to question what they have already learned in order to make people more receptive to this spirit. “And no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light.”26

“...there will be false teachers among you. They will secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying the sovereign Lord who bought them... many will follow... and will bring the way of truth into disrepute.”27

III. The Panentheism Heresy and its Concomitants28

A. Panentheism Defined

Frannie's New Age world view stems directly from her most basic philosophical assumption of Panentheism. Panentheism comes from the Greek: , 'everything'; , 'in'; , 'God'. “Everything in God”. Despite what the term denotes, the teaching of Panentheism is not to be confused with the teaching of the immanence of God in Christian Theism. Panentheism is defined as:

“The theory that the world is part of God, though not the whole of his being. ...a part of God is the universe and a part is simply God.”
  • Modern Catholic Dictionary

“The belief that the Being of God includes... the whole universe, so that every part of it exists in Him, but... that His Being is more than, and is not exhausted by, the universe.”
  • The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church

Frannie Rose rejects the Catholic teaching that all extra-Divine things were created ex nihilo and remain distinct from God in all respects, but rather teaches that “God was in everything around me, inside me, and greater than what was around me and inside me. God was all and more.”29 She has also written that we are all “a piece of God-self”, and that “We are a spark of God-Self. God is... the very essence of our spirit.”30 This spirit who refers to itself as 'I Am' has told her that “...you have always known Me. You are united with Me through all eternity.”31 In the context of encouraging people to empty their minds in order to listen to the voice of this spirit she states: “...we’re not going to become ‘a mind,’ we’re going to be God, unlimited mind.”32 “God-consciousness is infinite, it’s eternal, unlimited by thought and perception – ‘I AM,’ unrefined by the ego.”33

Such teachings are indistinguishable from the New Age teachings of Mark and Elizabeth Clare Prophet:

“...Jesus knows his True Self to be the Light-emanation of this Christ that always was, is, and ever shall be. And he wants you to know that your Real Self is also that selfsame Light.”34

“Jesus' I AM Presence looks just like yours. This is the common denominator. This is the co-equality of the sons and daughters of God. He created you equal in the sense that he gave you an I AM Presence – he gave you a Divine Self.”35

Likewise, the teaching of deceiving spirits who work through mediums36, an occult practice, also teach that we are God. In fact, Frannie herself serves as a medium when she publicizes the teachings of the spirit that refers to itself as 'I AM' in her book The Invitation.

A spirit that referred to itself as 'Ramtha' working through the medium J. Z. Knight taught: “God, the principal, is all things.”37 Another spirit that referred to itself as 'Jesus' working through the medium Helen Schucman taught: “The recognition of God is the recognition of yourself. There is no separation of God and His creation.”38 Another spirit that referred to itself as 'Seth' working through the medium Jane Roberts taught: “...there is nothing else but God – only God exists... All is God.”39 This is a very common experience within the New Age.

To the contrary:

“All that exists outside God was, in its whole substance, produced out of nothing by God.”40

“... although He is one, singular, altogether simple and unchangeable spiritual substance, must be proclaimed distinct in reality and essence from the world... from the beginning of time created each creature from nothing...”41

Therefore, there is an absolute distinction between the transcendent God, who is Wholly Other, and what we are. No aspect of ourselves were nor will ever be God in any way, to any degree, and any language that suggests otherwise is irresponsible, dangerous, and heretical.

Even the incarnation of Christ, a union of two natures which maintained each nature “...without mingling, without change... the distinction of the natures nowhere removed on account of the union...”42

Every one of Frannie's teachings are permeated with this basic, fundamental philosophical assumption. Her teachings concerning the True Self, of our inner Perfection, and the use of the term “God-consciousness” are all deeply rooted in Panentheism. Her teachings of the mind/heart conflict and listening to an inner voice all stem from a denial of Christian Theism.

B. The True Self
For example, the New Age teaching of the True Self is directly rooted in the Panentheistic world view. The following quotation from Thomas Keating43 puts this into perspective: “God and our true Self are not separate. Though we are not God, God and our true Self are the same thing.”44 Likewise Frannie Rose defines the True Self as “God +The Seeds of the Spirit”45. This language concerning the True Self can be confusing outside of a Panentheistic world view. Since Panentheism maintains that a part of God is the universe and a part is simply God, then the True Self can be said to be the same as that part of God that is the universe, and yet at the same time we are not God, in that we are not also that part of God that is simply God. The centering prayer movement, like the teachings of Frannie Rose, are “understood to be an infiltration of New Age/Hindu/Buddhist thought into traditional Catholic mysticism”.4647

C. Perfection and the New Age Version of Original Sin

Likewise, she rejects the Church's understanding of original sin but rather believes that we are perfect the moment we are born. Because she rejects the Catholic doctrine of a transcendent God who created all of us from nothing, she therefore believes that we are part of God and as such this part of us is perfect. “God pulls us back to the union that we were born to. The truth is that your heart and God are together as One... Your awareness when you came out of the birth canal was of the present moment. I was of the “I AM.”48 “You are originally unlimited and perfect. Later, you take on limitations.”49 “This is perfection. It is the only part of you that is perfect.”50 “...what happens is that we were always 'we' from the time of birth and what we did through our conditioning is that we walked away from that...kind of like the original sin... the way its taught is sometimes distorted...”51 “This is who you were and what you sought until the mind complicated things.”52 According to Frannie Rose, we are included in the being of God, and at some point we 'walked away from the voice of God' by entering into the delusion of duality. In other words, the 'original sin' of New Age Spirituality is that we lost sight of God-consciousness and began to take on a false self that we perceived as distinct from God, and therefore began to live out of the egoic mind. 'Salvation' within the New Age paradigm is seen as the journey of self-realization, of awakening, or of enlightenment, coming back to that original God-consciousness, that we are God.53

IV. The Church's Ultimate Trial

“Before Christ's second coming the Church must pass through a final trial that will shake the faith of many believers. The persecution that accompanies her pilgrimage on earth will unveil the 'mystery of iniquity' in the form of a religious deception offering men an apparent solution to their problems at the price of apostasy from the truth. The supreme religious deception is that of the Antichrist, a pseudo-messianism by which man glorifies himself in place of God and of his messiah come in the flesh.”54

  • New Age Spirituality is a “form of a religious deception offering men an apparent solution to their problems at the price of apostasy from the truth.”

  • Through the influence of New Age Spirituality people come to believe in the heresy of Panentheism and by which they identify themselves with God. This is the manner in which one “...glorifies himself in place of God...”

  • New Age Spirituality rejects and leads people away from the unique and exclusive incarnation of God and the Church which He established. This is the manner in which one denies “his messiah come in the flesh” “This is the spirit of antichrist, which you have heard is coming and even now is already in the world.”55

VI. Request for Ecclesiastical Censure

We formally request immediate and public censure of One Simple Voice and those involved on account of the heresies contained therein. As an “obstinate post-baptismal denial of some truth which must be believed with divine and catholic faith...”,56 it is clear that Frannie Rose has not only adopted material heresy but has been actively promoting it within the diocese despite being confronted with Catholic teaching. Thus far she is properly defined as a material heretic.

If she rejects any Catholic teaching but yet continues to pretend that she doesn't is a grave offense and is a blatant lie and is scandalous when done within the context of the public liturgy. If she recites the Nicene Creed but yet believes in Panentheism, or partakes of the Eucharist knowing that she is not in full communion with the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, or hypocritically pretends to be a Catholic by being a member but yet rejects the unique incarnation of God and the fullness of truth within the Catholic Church, but instead believes in New Age Spirituality, especially Panentheism, then she incurs automatic excommunication for her heresy.

“An apostate from the faith, a heretic or a schismatic incurs a latae sententiae excommunication...”57

“A person who deliberately denies even one of the doctrines of the Church cannot be a Catholic.”58

While I leave her moral culpability in the hands of God, it can not be denied that Frannie Rose is not excused by invincible ignorance, for the knowledge of her error must be apparent to her through our writings and any conversations which have taken place concerning the matter. Through these efforts Frannie Rose has been given sufficient time to recant her positions, gain a properly formed conscience under the teaching authority of the Catholic Church, and repair the damage that has been caused by the introduction of these destructive heresies.

To the contrary, she has obstinately continued in her heresy and remains actively engaged in promulgating the same despite being notified of her error.

I prefer that her de facto state of excommunication be recognized and enforced within the Church according to Canon Law. The Catechism of the Catholic Church likewise indicates that such a state of excommunication “...impedes the reception of the sacraments...”59 In my opinion, the continual allowance of participation within the Church is a scandal and should cease immediately. All necessary action should be taken to ensure that Bishop Hanifen, Frannie Rose, and any other Catholics involved in One Simple Voice are censured from all Church involvement, the reception of the sacraments, and association with the diocese, until which time they recant their errors, repent of their heresy, and cease the promulgation of the same. Above all, the Catholic faithful need to be properly warned of these heresies in order that they may not be led astray from their sincere and pure devotion to Christ, and the fullness of his revelation which subsists within the Catholic Church.

I know that I have written strongly concerning the matter and as I stated before do not intent to disrespect you or anyone else. In this research I have done my best to remain objective and to report my findings as they are and to assess the consequences of the situation as it is. Despite myself, I hope that the truthfulness and seriousness of the continuance of Frannie's participation in the Catholic Church will be recognized for the sake of the faithful everywhere.

Thank you for your careful and compassionate consideration of this letter and these circumstances.

Sincerely,


Corey L. Chambers


1 These interactions can be seen here in the comments upon this video. You may also be interested in the entire playlist as I set out to help educate Catholics on the dangers of Frannie's teachings: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rP_PXf90edk&list=PLeVjnsYkDEhoFLhC3a1G9O18YL6WgvTey
2 In her previous book, Fixing Frannie, she includes the following in her book list: The Way of the Wizard. The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success. Among other books written by Chopra is The Third Jesus, showing his view concerning “Christ-consciousness”, a synonymous term with God-consciousness. Chopra denies the unique incarnation of Jesus but rather presents a New Age Jesus where he shows us that we too are One with the Father, just as Jesus is, a Divine Self. See Marcia Montenegro's article on this book: http://christiananswersforthenewage.org/Articles_ChoprasThirdJesus.html
3 She stated on her Linked In page, before removing it at the request of Bishop Hanifen, that Deepak Chopra was her greatest influence.
4 She engages in a discussion about Tolle in her Rocky Mountain Views interview series and has quoted him several times in her book, The Invitation.
5 In her previous book, Fixing Frannie, she includes the following in her book list: The Celestine Vision. The Tenth Insight.
The Celestine Prophecy. See Montenegro's article: http://christiananswersforthenewage.org/Articles_Celestine.html
6 In her previous book, Fixing Frannie, she includes the following in her book list: Seat of the Soul. Soul Stories. Heart of the Soul. See article reviewing Gary Zukav: http://www.watchman.org/articles/new-age/gary-zukav--a-failure-to-name-evil/
7 1 John 4:1
8 1 Timothy 4:1
9 1 John 4:2b-3b
10 Rose, Frannie. The Invitation, 78.
11 Ibid, 59.
12 Ibid, 78.
13 Ibid, 59-60.
14 Ibid, 60.
15 Traditionally within the New Age Movement this age of peace that is sought has been referred to as the Age of Aquarius, it is an era of enlightenment and peace.
16 Rose, Frannie. The Invitation, 193.
17 Rocky Mountain Views, Interview with Frannie Rose
18 John 17:3
19 “Hardon, John. Modern Catholic Dictionary, 529. “...the term mainly refers to misguided claims that religious unity can be achieved by ignoring the differences between faiths on the assumption that all creeds are essentially one and the same.”
20 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar in July 2012, preserved as video content
21 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar in July 2012, preserved as video content
22 Rocky Mountain Views, Interview with Frannie Rose
23 Rocky Mountain Views, Interview with Frannie Rose
24 The Mystic Show, Interview with Frannie Rose
25 Rocky Mountain Views, Interview with Frannie Rose
26 2 Corinthians 11:14
27 2 Peter 2:1-2
28 It is possible that Frannie is a strict Pantheist, maintaining the monistic perspective that all is God, and God is all.
29 Rose, Frannie. The Invitation, 77.
30 Ibid, 21, 101.
31 Ibid, 75.
32 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar in July 2012, preserved as video content
33 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar in July 2012, preserved as video content
34 Prophet/Prophet, The Lost Teachings of Jesus 1: Missing Texts, Karma and Reincarnation, 115-16.
35 Prophet/Prophet, The Lost Teachings of Jesus 2: Mysteries of the Higher Self, 62.
36 Occult practices, including mediums, are condemned by God in Deuteronomy 18:9-14.
37 Mahr, Douglas. Ramtha, Voyage to the New World, 250.
38 Schucman, Helen. A Course in Miracles, 1:136
39 Roberts, Jane. The Seth Material, 237-38.
40 Ott, Ludwig. Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma, 79
41 Denzinger, Henry. The Sources of Catholic Dogma, pg 443. 1782-1783 quoting Vatican I
42 Chalcedonian Declaration
43 Bishop Hanifen has stated that he knows Keating personally. Hanifen also stated that he sees no problem with Panentheism. When asked about its definition he did not respond.
44 Keating, Thomas. Open Mind, Open Heart, 158.
45 Rose, Frannie. The Invitation, 105.
46 The work of John Morrison in A Response to Bishop Hanifen's Defense of One Simple Voice and to his Response to the Critique is highly recommended for further review of the New Age Movement and all the similarities to the teachings of Frannie Rose.
47 Connie Rossini, Is Centering Prayer Catholic?: Fr. Thomas Keating Meets Teresa of Avila and the CDF (New Ulm, MN: Four Waters, 2015)
48 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar, found in Morrison's A Response to Bishop Hanifen.
49 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar, found in Morrison's A Response to Bishop Hanifen.
50 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar, found in Morrison's A Response to Bishop Hanifen.
51 The Mystic Show, Interview with Frannie Rose
52 Spoken at a One Simple Voice Seminar, found in Morrison's A Response to Bishop Hanifen.
53 When Frannie was asked if she was enlightened on the Mysitic show she stated: “I was all of that, I would say I was all of that, I was awakened, I was enlightened, some of the experiences were like the Buddhist term satori…”
54 Catechism of the Catholic Church, 675
55 1 John 4:3b
56 Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2089
57 Code of Canon Law, 1364
58 Baltimore Catechism, 156 d
59 Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1463

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