Patrick Henry Omlor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Patrick Henry Omlor is a Traditionalist Catholic author, born in the United States of America but latterly resident in Western Australia, who opposes the changes instituted by and under the auspices of the Second Vatican Council.

He is best known for his 1967 book Questioning The Validity of the Masses using the New, All English Canon [1] which questions the validity of the post-conciliar form of consecration.

He also issued a series of newsletters under the name Interdum (meaning, "Intermittent"), in which he chronicled the falsehoods on which the substitution of Pro Omnibus for Pro Multis, in the Rite of Consecration of the wine in the Holy Mass, is premised, based on the claims of the German Protestant bible scholar, Joachim Jeremias, that the Aramaic language did not have a word for "all" and so Jesus Christ used the word "many" with the meaning "all", a claim that Omlor proves in great detail to be false.It is a theme further developed by the New Zealand canon lawyer Rev Fr Denzil Meuli in his thesis "Res Sacramenti".

His works have been collected into a book called The Robber Church [2]


[edit] See also

[edit] External links