Yes, many of us have known this for quite some time. (For the record, I am not affiliated with RealCatholicTV and RealCatholicTV is not affiliated with me.)
The persecution already began some time ago and it will continue and will grow, as Michael Voris predicts. One point that Voris misses is that the homosexual rights movement is not completely about homosexual rights, it is about cloning and embryonic stem cell research. [However, he does touch on this on his excellent follow-up about contraception] When you have two woman legally married, you have all the legal and biological structures in place to engage in cloning and embryonic stem cell research and that means money and lots of it in research grants, etc. It also means the ability to fall into the temptation to "Be Like Gods" creating life as humans want even designing children right up to their IQ's.
Abortion is really about sacrificing children in the name of future prosperity and it is a practice that is either before or after birth that is as old as humanity itself. Indeed, in the movie, The Passion of the Christ based on Sister Anne Catherine Emmerick's visions, those children that chase after Judas represent the children sacrificed to idols when the Jews adopted the pagan practices of their neighbors.
The problem is that these such movements will fail but not until they create great disasters and leave a trail of death and destruction especially the human kind. However, what to keep in mind is that Mary told the three shepherd children in Fatima that in the end her Immaculate Heart will triumph.
I know Michael Voris does put much blame of this on the US bishops. Well, I will leave the blaming to him, my question is what to do. The answer is to pray and to pray hard, a request by Cardinal Sean O'Malley. It is also to seek to live your faith daily as a disciple of Christ. Be rooted in Christ and live for him everyday. If you are looking for a model to follow, consider St. Patrick's Breastplate.
If you are looking for a bible verse to guide you, then check out Romans 1:18ff. If you look carefully, it denotes the source of all of our problems. When a society turns from Christ then it slowly decays until it collapses into passion driven anarchy. So you will have a choice, follow Christ in trust that He is leading you where you belong or seek the ways of the world and be successful for a time until there is a total collapse.
Monsignor Jonas Abib, founder of Canção Nova, warns that the Church must suffer as did Christ on the cross and yes that time is coming. Are you going to embrace your cross or embrace all the temporal goods the world can give you?
The reality is that we have been here before. Mr. Voris complains about people who do not live their faith serving the Church. There is nothing new under the sun. If you read the eighth chapter of Ezekiel you will find a similar situation. Leaders of the Jewish people were secretly serving other gods in the thought that they had been forgotten by the God of Israel. Meanwhile, God warns Ezekiel that He is aware of every action done in secret that is bringing destruction on his people.
The warning signs to the people then were there. The warning signs to us now are here. How do we respond?
Stay close to the sacraments. Pray and pray hard and be focused on Christ. Yes, there are times a-coming that will be difficult, but remain close to prayer and seek to grow in holiness and eternity is our reward. It is something that God says we gain with holy perseverance and not in any other way. The evil one will do everything he can to get us to turn from God and to give-up. He is after all the prince of darkness and St. Paul reminds us that we are children of the light and of the day.(1 Thess 5:5) Therefore, the prince of darkness will do all he can to extinguish your light. But Be still and know that God is God.(Psalm 46:10) Pray, hope, trust, repent, believe and act in prayerful Catholic holiness. God our Father is the ultimate victor always. Ezekiel knew that before the Babylonian exile happened. We can know that too.
God Bless You,
Fr. Robert J Carr