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requesting to accepts the Sunday not just as a day of family day, or a day
or rest, but as a Lord's day. What Lord?? Well, in this article he reads
the words of Isaiah, which Jesus read them when he revealed himself as the
promised Messiah. ""Today this Scripture is fulfilled in your hearing" (Lk.
4:21)." So the Lord's Day is Sunday which is the the day of the Lord of
Catholicism which is the Pope, which is the mark of the beast, since the
pope is the Beast of Revelation 13 which comes out of waters. Also he
requests for people to come partake of the Eucharist every Sunday as a
testimony that they have accepted Sundays as the Lord's Day, Or Pope's day.
The Eucharist crucifies our Lord Jesus every time they part take of it.
Also the pope brings to memory, the Day of Memory or the day of the
Holocaust, which I read into it as this: the Jews as a nation did not
accept Jesus as the Son of God and Holocaust came upon them, if we do not
accept the Pope as the Jesus for today and his Sunday as the Day of the
Lord, another Holocaust is waiting for us. And there are many others
details that I did not mention. Here he points out where we learn the Word
of God:"Before speaking about God and with God we must listen to him, and
*the Church’s liturgy is the 'school' of this listening to the Lord who speaks
to us," the Holy Father said. Also he brought doves as if he has power to
control the Holy Spirit. *
And the article that follows points out that the pope, a World Sheppard/
Priest is raising an Altar of Peace in Jerusalem. This has happen in 2009,
so all things are in place.
Read the article here: http://www.zenit.org/article-36416?l=english
Read several authors' thoughts on papal Rome's history.
This article highlights quotes from historical and Catholic sources proving the Papacy's aggressive nature.
An Italian mystic. A minister to a British king. An Augustine monk. A Swiss farmer's boy. What do these men have in common? They were used by God in powerful ways to bring about the Protestant Reformation. Enter into the lives of these ordinary people with extraordinary stories.
Inspiration for these articles comes from Gideon and Hilda Hagstoz' Heroes of the Reformation