Two errors. Opposite directions. Same diagnosis. Twin Scourges takes on the anti-Catholicism that denies Catholics are Christians at all, and the theological liberalism that quietly dissolves historic Christian orthodoxy from inside the churches — and shows why both stem from the same failures of logic, honesty, and faith.
Twelve chapters cover the territory: general observations on anti-Catholicism, Martin Luther’s role, whether all opposition to Catholicism qualifies as “anti-Catholic,” the gospel and faith and works, the “double standard” question, a psychology of anti-Catholicism, anti-Sacramentalism, heterodox Catholics and liberal Protestants, nominal and sinful Catholics, and the practical fallout from the modernist crisis. Six appendices anchor the case in primary sources — Luther’s anti-Catholic statements, G. K. Chesterton on anti-Catholicism, Newman on both anti-Catholicism and theological liberalism, the term “anti-Catholic” in non-Catholic scholarly use, and the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia on modernism.
For Catholics tired of being told their faith isn’t Christian — and for any Christian watching the same churches that mock Rome slide quietly into liberalism themselves.
Inside this book
- Why anti-Catholicism is a real category — not just “disagreement” — and where the double-standard objection breaks down
- Martin Luther’s own anti-Catholic statements, documented and weighed
- The psychology of anti-Catholicism: what’s actually driving it
- Heterodox Catholics and liberal Protestants as mirror cases of the same modernist drift
- Newman, Chesterton, and the 1913 *Catholic Encyclopedia* on modernism — primary sources gathered in six appendices





